Access the full text.
Sign up today, get DeepDyve free for 14 days.
C. Pittendrigh, Victor Bruce, Peter Kaus (1958)
ON THE SIGNIFICANCE OF TRANSIENTS IN DAILY RHYTHMS.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 44 9
C. Pittendrigh (1981)
Circadian Systems: General Perspective
V. Sharma, M. Chandrashekaran (1997)
Rapid phase resetting of a mammalian circadian rhythm by brief light pulses.Chronobiology international, 14 6
C. Pittendrigh (1967)
Circadian systems. I. The driving oscillation and its assay in Drosophila pseudoobscura.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 58 4
(1962)
Zur Deutung der Phasenverschiebungen und “transients” nach exogener Stoerung endogener Rhythmen
(1980)
Studies of the circadian clock of Neurospora crassa: Light induced phase shifting
P. Decoursey (1986)
Circadian Photoentrainment: Parameters of Phase DelayingJournal of Biological Rhythms, 1
(1992)
Phase response curves : What can they tell us about the circadian clocks ?
V. Sharma, M. Chandrashekaran, P. Nongkynrih (1997)
Daylight and Artificial Light Phase Response Curves for the Circadian Rhythm in Locomotor Activity of the Field Mouse Mus boodugaBiological Rhythm Research, 28
(1957)
An oscillator model of biological clocks
A. Winfree (1983)
Book reviewThe clocks that time us : Martin Moore-Ede, Frank Sulzman, and Charles Fuller Harvard University Press, Cambridge, 1982, 448 pp., $25.00Bellman Prize in Mathematical Biosciences, 66
S. Binkley, K. Mosher (1987)
Circadian Rhythm Resetting in Sparrows: Early Response to Doublet Light PulsesJournal of Biological Rhythms, 2
A. Johnsson, H. Karlsson, W. Engelmann (1973)
Phase Shift Effects in the Kalanchoë Petal Rhythm due to Two or More Light PulsesPhysiologia Plantarum, 28
(1990)
An atlas of phase response curves for circadian and circatidal rhythms
In two separate sets of experiments, the phases of the locomotor activity rhythm of the nocturnal field mouse Mus booduga were probed using two light pulses (LPs). In the first set of experiments, the circadian pacemaker underlying the locomotor activity rhythm was perturbed at circadian time 14 (CT 14) using a resetting light pulse LP1 of 1000 lux intensity and 15 min duration. The phases of the resetting pacemaker were then probed at all even CTs between CT 16 and CT 14 using a PRC probing light pulse LP2 of equal strength. The “LP2PRC” thus obtained was then compared with the single light pulse PRC in terms of the area under delay (D) and advance (A) zones of the PRCs. The time course and waveform of the two LP PRCs suggest that the LP2PRC resembled the single LP PRC, displaced by 2 h toward the right. The LP2PRC had smaller D compared to the single LPPRC (p = 0.007), whereas both the PRCs had A of equal magnitude (p = 0.23). This suggests that the pacemaker phase shifts rapidly after LP perturbations. In the second set of experiments, the LP1 was administered at CT 14. The phase of the pacemaker was then perturbed on day 1 (next cycle after LP1) either 2 h after activity onset (at ca. CT 14 of the transient cycle) or 8 h after activity onset (at ca. CT 20 of the transient cycle) using an LP2 of equal strength. It was observed that the steady-state phase shifts evoked by positioning an LP2, 2 h after activity onset, were positively correlated with the phase shifts observed on day 1. The steady-state phase shifts observed, when the LP2 was positioned, 8 h after activity onset, were negatively correlated with the phase shifts observed on day 1. These results suggest that the transient cycles do not mirror the state of the pacemaker oscillator.
Journal of Biological Rhythms – SAGE
Published: Feb 1, 2000
Read and print from thousands of top scholarly journals.
Already have an account? Log in
Bookmark this article. You can see your Bookmarks on your DeepDyve Library.
To save an article, log in first, or sign up for a DeepDyve account if you don’t already have one.
Copy and paste the desired citation format or use the link below to download a file formatted for EndNote
Access the full text.
Sign up today, get DeepDyve free for 14 days.
All DeepDyve websites use cookies to improve your online experience. They were placed on your computer when you launched this website. You can change your cookie settings through your browser.