<p>(Chapters 11 to 14) summarise important features of the biological clock at the level of whole animal covering all vertebrate classes (fish to mammal). Chapters 15 and 16 are on long term (seasonal) rhythms in plants and higher vertebrates. Short term rhythms (ultradian rhythms), the significance
Biological Rhythms
β Scribed by JΓΌrgen Aschoff (auth.), JΓΌrgen Aschoff (eds.)
- Publisher
- Springer US
- Year
- 1981
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 564
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Interest in biological rhythms has been traced back more than 2,500]ears to Archilochus, the Greek poet, who in one of his fragments suggests ",,(i,,(VWO'KE o'olos pv{}J.tos txv{}pW7rOVS ~XH" (recognize what rhythm governs man) (Aschoff, 1974). Reference can also be made to the French student of medicine J. J. Virey who, in his thesis of 1814, used for the first time the expression "horloge vivante" (living clock) to describe daily rhythms and to D. C. W. Hufeland (1779) who called the 24-hour period the unit of our natural chronology. However, it was not until the 1930s that real progress was made in the analysis of biological rhythms; and Erwin Bunning was encouraged to publish the first, and still not outdated, monograph in the field in 1958. Two years later, in the middle of exciting discoveries, we took a breather at the Cold Spring Harbor Symposium on Biological Clocks. Its survey on rules considered valid at that time, and Pittendrigh's anticipating view on the temporal organization of living systems, made it a milestone on our way from a more formalistic description of biological rhythms to the understanding of their structural and physiological basis.
β¦ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages i-xix
Front Matter....Pages 1-1
A Survey on Biological Rhythms....Pages 3-10
Methodology....Pages 11-19
Data Analysis....Pages 21-39
Mathematical Models....Pages 41-54
Front Matter....Pages 55-55
Circadian Systems: General Perspective....Pages 57-80
Freerunning and Entrained Circadian Rhythms....Pages 81-93
Circadian Systems: Entrainment....Pages 95-124
Behavioral Rhythms in Invertebrates....Pages 125-144
Neural and Endocrine Control of Circadian Rhythmicity in Invertebrates....Pages 145-172
Genetics and Development of Circadian Rhythms in Invertebrates....Pages 173-181
Vertebrate Behavioral Rhythms....Pages 183-213
Internal Temporal Order....Pages 215-241
Neural and Endocrine Control of Circadian Rhythms in the Vertebrates....Pages 243-255
Ontogeny of Circadian Rhythms....Pages 257-274
Adaptive Daily Strategies in Behavior....Pages 275-298
Clock-Controlled Orientation in Space....Pages 299-309
The Circadian System of Man....Pages 311-331
Rhythms in Performance....Pages 333-348
Front Matter....Pages 349-349
Tidal and Lunar Rhythms....Pages 351-380
Annual Rhythms: Perspective....Pages 381-389
Front Matter....Pages 349-349
Circannual Systems....Pages 391-410
Insect Photoperiodism....Pages 411-447
Photoperiodism in Vertebrates....Pages 449-473
Annual Rhythms in Man....Pages 475-487
Front Matter....Pages 489-489
Short-Term Rhythms in Activity....Pages 491-498
Temporal Characteristics of Sleep....Pages 499-522
Cyclic Function of the Mammalian Ovary....Pages 523-545
Back Matter....Pages 547-563
β¦ Subjects
Science, general
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