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Published Online:https://doi.org/10.1176/ajp.127.8.1001

The authors studied 29 healthy men who habitualy slept nocturnally for long or short periods. The short sleepers were efficient, hardworking, and somewhat hypomanic: the long sleepers tended to be anxious, depressed, and withdrawn. Both groups had similar slow-wave-sleep (SWS) time, but the long sleepers had twice as much D (REM) sleep. The authors suggest that there are two separate requirements—a relatively constant requirement for SWS and a requirement for D sleep that is related to the individual's personality and life style.

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