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biological clock |
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biological clockRegular internal rhythm of activity, produced by periodic changes in the concentrations of certain molecules, described as circadian rhythms. Such clocks are known to exist in almost all animals, and also in many plants, fungi, and unicellular organisms. In higher organisms, there appears to be a series of clocks of graded importance. For example, although body temperature and activity cycles in human beings are normally ‘set’ to 24 hours, the two cycles may vary independently, showing that two clock mechanisms are involved. The first biological clock gene in plants was isolated in 1995 by a US team of researchers.
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Americans sleep less than they used to, and this could be part of the reason why more of us are now overweight," says David Dinges, Chief of the Division of Sleep and Chronobiology at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine. Harvey Moldolfsky, director of the center for sleep and chronobiology at the University of Toronto. If you don't get at least eight hours of sleep a night, your chances of getting sick increase," says cold expert Harvey Moldofsky, medical director of the sleep disorders clinic at the Centre for Sleep and Chronobiology in Toronto. |
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