SLEEP 2014 Final Program - page 50

0710
2:15pm - 2:30pm
SLEEPDISTURBANCE, SLEEPRELATED
SYMPTOMSANDBIOLOGICALRHYTHMS
INHEARTFAILUREPATIENTSWHOHAVE
INSOMNIA
Redeker NS, JeonSS, Pacelli J, AndersonG
0711
2:30pm - 2:45pm
THECONTRIBUTIONOFSHORTSLEEP
DURATIONTOALL-CAUSEMORTALITY IN
CARDIOMETABOLICDISORDERS
VgontzasAN, Fernandez-Mendoza J, LiaoD,
PejovicS, CalhounSL, Bixler EO
0712
2:45pm - 3:00pm
THEASSOCIATIONBETWEENSLEEP
CHARACTERISTICSANDPROTHROMBOTIC
MARKERS INAPOPULATIONBASEDSAMPLE:
CHICAGOAREASLEEPSTUDY (CASS)
CarnethonMR, Tosur Z, KnutsonKL, Goldberger
JJ, DeChavezP, LiuK, KimK, ZeePC, GreenD
S01: Consequences of Chronic
SleepRestriction: New Insights from
Animal Models andHumanStudies
1:00pm –3:00pm
RoomL100H
Chair:
KazueSemba, PhD
Faculty:
Carol Everson, PhD; Robert Strecker, PhD; and
HansVanDongen, PhD
Psychologist Level of Content:
Intermediate
Objectives:
1. Recognizeneurobehavioural, physiological, cognitive,
performanceand psychosocial impacts of chronic
sleep loss;
2. Discuss new findings on the effects of chronic
sleep restriction on bone remodeling, intestinal cell
integrity, and gene expression in the brainwhichmay
explain impairments and adaptations to chronic sleep
restriction; and
3. Review thepattern of cognitive impairment during
chronic sleep restriction in humans, model cognitive
deficits and adaptation in sleep and performance
patterns, and relate these findings to psychosocial
factors.
1:00pm – 1:30pm
Behavioral andNeurobiological
Consequencesof Chronic
Restriction inRats
Robert Strecker, PhD
1:30pm – 2:00pm
Changes inDailySleepPatterns,
Psychomotor VigilanceTask
Performance andFosB/
deltaFosB Induction in a
RatModel of ChronicSleep
Restriction
KazueSemba, PhD
2:00pm – 2:30pm
TheToll of ChronicSleepLoss:
InjuredCells and Insufficient
Repair
Carol Everson, PhD
2:30pm – 3:00pm
ChronicSleepRestriction,
Neurobehavioral Impairment and
ModelingofAllostasis
HansVanDongen, PhD
S02: Ground-breakingTheories on
SleepRegulationandFunction
1:00pm – 3:00pm
RoomL100F
Chair:
Carol Everson, PhD
Faculty:
MarkBlumberg, PhD; CarstenKorth, MD, PhD;
MarkusSchmidt, MD, PhD; and JeromeSiegel, PhD
Psychologist Level of Content:
Intermediate
Objectives:
1. Discuss the dynamics of four new and updated
theories about whywe sleep;
2. Recognize, withbroad understanding, the forces
acting on sleep and affecting central and peripheral
functions attributable to sleep;
3. Gain insight intowhy sleep is a vital life experience
andwhy it may have evolved.
1:00pm – 1:05pm
NewFrameworks for Thinking
AboutWhyWeSleep
Carol Everson, PhD
1:05pm – 1:30pm
Sleep asanEnergy
ConservationTool
JeromeSiegel, PhD
ScientificProgram | Sunday
50
1...,40,41,42,43,44,45,46,47,48,49 51,52,53,54,55,56,57,58,59,60,...196
Powered by FlippingBook