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This work proceeds from a deduction from evolutionary principles,
that primitive sleep was non-uniform preceding the origin of the
REM and NREM states. Coupling this conclusion with knowledge of
the thermoregulatory responses to ambient temperatures by sleeping
mammals, and indications that the REM and NREM sleep states originated
during the evolution of warm-bloodedness in the Mid-to-Late Triassic
period, implicates ambient temperature as the environmental variable
responsible for the non-uniform condition of primitive sleep.
Drawing on the paleontology and paleoecology of early ancestors
of mammals, together with the uniquely warm and moist, moderate
climates of the times, a sequence of selective pressures and resulting
adaptations are proposed, leading to the origin of REM and NREM
sleep and a basis for their cyclic alternation. (Sleep and Hypnosis
2002;4(3):85-92)
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