J. A. Hobson
Harvard University
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Featured researches published by J. A. Hobson.
Brain Research | 1983
Ralph Lydic; Robert W. McCarley; J. A. Hobson
Long-term recordings of dorsal raphe (DRN) activity were obtained from cats chronically implanted with microwires. The continuous time-course of DRN discharge, PGO waves, and muscle tone was quantified across multiple sleep cycles. DRN activity profiles were inversely correlated with PGO waves, biphasically related to muscle tone, and varied with sleep cycle phase. The role of DRN as a putative regulator of behavioral state and/or specific physiological variables is discussed.
Neuroreport | 1996
Nordby H; Kenneth Hugdahl; Robert Stickgold; Bronnick Ks; J. A. Hobson
USING an oddball paradigm with two tones differing in pitch and probability, event-related potentials (ERPs) were compared during wake and two sleep stages. REM and NREM sleep stages were identified in nine subjects using the Nightcap which continuously records eye and body movements. The N1 occurred later and the P2 was larger during sleep than when awake. The N1 to the infrequent tones was larger during both sleep stages. A late negative wave was significantly larger to infrequent tones during REM sleep. It is concluded that representations of auditory stimuli occur in sleep, and most prominently during the REM phase. The prolonged latency of the ERP components indicates that processing of external sensory stimuli may be delayed.
Neuroscience Letters | 1983
Ralph Lydic; Robert W. McCarley; J. A. Hobson
Single cell activity was recorded with microwire electrodes from the dorsal raphe nucleus (DRN) of cats across multiple cycles of sleep and wakefulness. Electrical stimulation of the medial pontine reticular formation (mPRF) produced a 10-fold enhancement of DRN discharge during wakefulness and slow wave sleep but not during desynchronized sleep. The neuronal mechanisms likely to mediate the state-dependent effects of mPRF stimulation are discussed with regard to the hypothesis that DRN plays a major role in behavioral state control.
Journal of Vestibular Research-equilibrium & Orientation | 1998
J. A. Hobson; Robert Stickgold; Edward F. Pace-Schott; K. R. Leslie
Optimal human performance depends upon integrated sensorimotor and cognitive functions, both of which are known to be exquisitely sensitive to loss of sleep. Under the microgravity conditions of space flight, adaptation of both sensorimotor (especially vestibular) and cognitive functions (especially orientation) must occur quickly--and be maintained--despite any concurrent disruptions of sleep that may be caused by microgravity itself, or by the uncomfortable sleeping conditions of the spacecraft. It is the three-way interaction between sleep quality, general work efficiency, and sensorimotor integration that is the subject of this paper and the focus of new work in our laboratory. To record sleep under field conditions including microgravity, we utilize a novel system called the Nightcap that we have developed and extensively tested on normal and sleep-disordered subjects. To perturb the vestibular system in ground-based studies, we utilize a variety of experimental conditions including optokinetic stimulation and both minifying and reversing goggle paradigms that have been extensively studied in relation to plasticity of the vestibulo-ocular reflex. Using these techniques we will test the hypothesis that vestibular adaptation both provokes and is enhanced by REM sleep under both ground-based and space conditions. In this paper we describe preliminary results of some of our studies.
Science | 1975
J. A. Hobson; Robert W. McCarley; Pw Wyzinski
American Journal of Psychiatry | 1977
J. A. Hobson; Robert W. McCarley
Science | 2001
Robert Stickgold; J. A. Hobson; Roar Fosse; Magdalena J. Fosse
Science | 1975
Robert W. McCarley; J. A. Hobson
Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics | 1984
Helen A. Baghdoyan; Anthony P. Monaco; Margarita L. Rodrigo-Angulo; F Assens; Robert W. McCarley; J. A. Hobson
Journal of Neurophysiology | 1983
J. P. Nelson; Robert W. McCarley; J. A. Hobson