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  2. Montreal experiments - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Montreal_experiments

    The Montreal experiments were a series of experiments, initially aimed to treat schizophrenia [1] by changing memories and erasing the patients' thoughts using the Scottish psychiatrist Donald Ewen Cameron's method of "psychic driving", [2] as well as drug-induced sleep, intensive electroconvulsive therapy, sensory deprivation and Thorazine.

  3. Randy Gardner sleep deprivation experiment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Randy_Gardner_sleep...

    Randy Gardner (born c. 1946) is an American man from San Diego, California, who once held the record for the longest amount of time a human has gone without sleep.In December 1963/January 1964, 17-year-old Gardner stayed awake for 11 days and 24 minutes (264.4 hours), breaking the previous record of 260 hours held by Tom Rounds.

  4. Sleep deprivation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sleep_deprivation

    Sleep deprivation, also known as sleep insufficiency [2] or sleeplessness, is the condition of not having adequate duration and/or quality of sleep to support decent alertness, performance, and health. It can be either chronic or acute and may vary widely in severity.

  5. The Infamous ‘Russian Sleep Experiment’ Sounds Like ... - AOL

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  6. Unethical human experimentation in the United States

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unethical_human...

    Sleep deprivation tests were performed on over a dozen prisoners, in 48-, 96- and 180-hour increments. Doctors also collected data intended to help them judge the emotional and physical effects of the techniques so as to "calibrate the level of pain experienced by detainees during interrogation" and to determine if using certain types of ...

  7. Maria Manaseina - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maria_Manaseina

    Maria Manaseina (1860) Maria Mikhaĭlovna Manàsseina, also known as Marie de Manacéïne, was a neuroscientist who specialized in the area of sleep deprivation. [1] She was born in Korkunova in 1841 and died in Saint Petersburg on 17 March in 1903.

  8. What is the Black-white sleep gap, and how is it ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/what-is-the-blackwhite-sleep...

    The first, a 2006 study in the American Journal of Epidemiology, found that, while white women and white men sleep over six hours a night on average, Black women sleep just 5.9 hours a night and ...

  9. Ganzfeld effect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ganzfeld_effect

    The visual effect is described as the loss of vision as the brain cuts off the unchanging signal from the eyes. The result is "seeing black", [ citation needed ] an apparent sense of blindness. A flickering ganzfeld causes geometrical patterns and colors to appear, and this is the working principle for mind machines and the dream machine .