00992nam0-22003371i-450 99000115937040332120200213110743.0000115937FED01000115937(Aleph)000115937FED0100011593720000920d1985----km-y0itay50------baengJPRecent topics in nonlinear PDE IIedited K. Masuda, M. MimuraTokyoKinokuniya companyAmsterdam (etc.)North-Holland1985228 p.24 cmNorth-Holland mathematics studies128Lecture notes in numerical and applied analysis8Masuda,KyuyaMimura,MasayasuITUNINARICAUNIMARCBK990001159370403321C-21-(1282498MA102 35 E 505025FINBNFINBNMA1Recent Topics in Nonlinear PDE II346679UNINAING0101333nam a2200361 i 450099100079391970753620020507173653.0941117s1982 rm ||| | eng 9027714096b1075815x-39ule_instLE01302415ExLDip.to Matematicaeng515.782AMS 44-XXAMS 44A35LC QA324.K4413Kecs, Wilhelm41423The convolution product and some applications /Wilhelm Kecs ; translated from Romanian by Victor Giurgiutiu - 2nd edBucuresti, Romania :Editura Academiei ; Dordrecht : Reidel,c1982xvii, 332 p. ;23 cmMathematics and its applications. East european series ;21st ed. publ. in 1978Bibliography: p. [323]-328Includes indexConvolutionsTheory of distributionsTopological linear spaces.b1075815x19-12-1728-06-02991000793919707536LE013 44-XX GIU11 (1982)12013000013947le013-E0.00-l- 01010.i1085277328-06-02Convolution Product and Some Applications348828UNISALENTOle01301-01-94ma -engrm 4103077nam 2200529z- 450 991055722160332120211118(CKB)5400000000041728(oapen)https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/73717(oapen)doab73717(EXLCZ)99540000000004172820202111d2020 |y 0engurmn|---annantxtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierLocal Aspects of Sleep and WakefulnessFrontiers Media SA20201 online resource (186 p.)2-88963-565-1 It is now well established that sleep and wakefulness are locally regulated. In fact, typical sleep hallmarks, such as slow waves and spindles, display a clear regional modulation based on maturational and experience-dependent brain plasticity. Of note, these regional changes have been suggested to reflect the off-line processing and transformation of wake-dependent brain modifications, in line with a direct involvement of sleep in learning and memory consolidation. In addition, recent work showed that islands of wakefulness and sleep may often coexist in the same individual. Indeed, the incidence of local sleep-like episodes during wakefulness increases following sleep restriction or deprivation, but also as a consequence of the reiterated or extended 'use' of task-related brain areas. Such sleep-like activity seems to represent an index of 'functional fatigue' and may have a significant impact on behavior and cognition. On the other hand, local wake-like activity may occur during sleep and has been suggested to be involved in the generation and characterization of dream experiences. Finally, alterations in the balance between local aspects of sleep and wakefulness may contribute to explain symptoms commonly attributed to many sleep disorders, such as insomnia or sleepwalking. However, preliminary evidence has also pointed to their potential involvement in neurological (e.g., stroke) and psychiatric (e.g., major depression) pathological conditions. This Research Topic collects articles related to the investigation and characterization of local aspects of sleep and wakefulness.NeurosciencesbicsscScience: general issuesbicsscconnectivityDisconnectionfMRI-EEGhd-EEGK-complexLocal sleepMEGplasticitySleepsleep spindleSlow WaveNeurosciencesScience: general issuesBernardi Giulioedt152983Siclari FrancescaedtBellesi MicheleedtBernardi GiulioothSiclari FrancescaothBellesi MicheleothBOOK9910557221603321Local Aspects of Sleep and Wakefulness3026155UNINA