[HTML][HTML] Identification of neurons with a privileged role in sleep homeostasis in Drosophila melanogaster

G Seidner, JE Robinson, M Wu, K Worden, P Masek… - Current Biology, 2015 - cell.com
Sleep is thought to be controlled by two main processes: a circadian clock that primarily
regulates sleep timing and a homeostatic mechanism that detects and responds to sleep …

[HTML][HTML] Identification of Neurons with a Privileged Role in Sleep Homeostasis in Drosophila melanogaster

G Seidner, JE Robinson, M Wu, K Worden, P Masek… - Current Biology, 2015 - Elsevier
Sleep is thought to be controlled by two main processes: a circadian clock that primarily
regulates sleep timing and a homeostatic mechanism that detects and responds to sleep …

[PDF][PDF] Identification of Neurons with a Privileged Role in Sleep Homeostasis in Drosophila melanogaster

G Seidner, JE Robinson, M Wu, K Worden… - Current …, 2015 - researchgate.net
Sleep is thought to be controlled by two main processes: a circadian clock that primarily
regulates sleep timing and a homeostatic mechanism that detects and responds to sleep …

Identification of Neurons with a Privileged Role in Sleep Homeostasis in Drosophila melanogaster

G Seidner, JE Robinson, M Wu, K Worden, P Masek… - Current Biology, 2015 - infona.pl
Sleep is thought to be controlled by two main processes: a circadian clock that primarily
regulates sleep timing and a homeostatic mechanism that detects and responds to sleep …

Identification of neurons with a privileged role in sleep homeostasis in Drosophila melanogaster.

G Seidner, JE Robinson, WML Wu MeiLin, K Worden… - 2015 - cabidigitallibrary.org
Sleep is thought to be controlled by two main processes: a circadian clock that primarily
regulates sleep timing and a homeostatic mechanism that detects and responds to sleep …

Identification of Neurons with a Privileged Role in Sleep Homeostasis in Drosophila melanogaster

G Seidner, JE Robinson, M Wu… - Current …, 2015 - pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Sleep is thought to be controlled by two main processes: a circadian clock that primarily
regulates sleep timing and a homeostatic mechanism that detects and responds to sleep …

[HTML][HTML] Identification of neurons with a privileged role in sleep homeostasis in Drosophila melanogaster

G Seidner, JE Robinson, M Wu, K Worden… - Current biology …, 2015 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Sleep is thought to be controlled by two main processes: a circadian clock that primarily
regulates sleep timing and a homeostatic mechanism that detects and responds to sleep …

Identification of Neurons with a Privileged Role in Sleep Homeostasis in Drosophila melanogaster.

G Seidner, JE Robinson, M Wu, K Worden… - Current Biology …, 2015 - europepmc.org
Sleep is thought to be controlled by two main processes: a circadian clock that primarily
regulates sleep timing and a homeostatic mechanism that detects and responds to sleep …

Identification of Neurons with a Privileged Role in Sleep Homeostasis in Drosophila melanogaster

G Seidner, JE Robinson, M Wu, K Worden… - Current …, 2015 - ui.adsabs.harvard.edu
Sleep is thought to be controlled by two main processes: a circadian clock that primarily
regulates sleep timing and a homeostatic mechanism that detects and responds to sleep …

[PDF][PDF] Identification of Neurons with a Privileged Role in Sleep Homeostasis in Drosophila melanogaster

G Seidner, JE Robinson, M Wu, K Worden, P Masek… - Current …, 2015 - academia.edu
Sleep is thought to be controlled by two main processes: a circadian clock that primarily
regulates sleep timing and a homeostatic mechanism that detects and responds to sleep …