ChaseM.MoralesF. (1983) Sub threshold excitatory activity and motor-neurone discharge during REM periods of active sleep. Science221, 1195–8.
8.
DementW. (1976) Some Must Sleep While Others Watch. San Francisco Book Co. p. 79.
9.
DementW.KleitmanN. (1957a) Cyclic variations in EEG during sleep and their relation to eye movements, bodily motility and dreaming. Electroencephalography and Clinical Neurophysiology9, 673.
10.
DementW.KleitmanN. (1957b) J. Exp. Psychol.53, 339.
11.
FentonG. (1975) Clinical disorders of sleep. (Review) Br. J. Hosp. Med. Aug. 120–15.
12.
FenwickP. (1987) Somnambulism and the Law: a review. Behav. Sci. and the Law.5 (3), 343–57.
13.
FenwickP. (1990) Automatism, medicine and the law. Psychol. Med. Monogram Suppl. 17, 1–27.
14.
FenwickP.FenwickE. (eds) (1985) Epilepsy and the Law: A Medical Symposium on the Current Law. Royal Society of Medicine International Congress and Symposium Series. No. 81. pp. 3–8. London, The Royal Society of Medicine.
15.
FenwickP.SchatzmanM.WorsleyA. (1984). Lucid dreaming: correspondence between dreamed and actual events in one subject during REM sleep. Biol. Psychol.18, 243–52.
16.
FisherC.ByrneJ.EdwardsA.KahnE. (1970) A psychophysiological study of nightmares. J. Am. Psychoanalytical Ass.18, 747–82.
17.
GastautH.BroughtonR. (1965) A clinical and polygraphic study of episodic phenomena during sleep. In: WortisJ. (ed.) Recent Advances in Biological Psychiatry. Vol. VII. pp. 197–221. New York, Plenum Press.
18.
GoodM. I. (1976) The concept of drug automatism. Am. J. Psychiat.133 (8), 948–51.
19.
HalbreichU.AssaelM. (1978) Electroencephalogram with sphenoidal needles in sleepwalkers. Psychiatria Clin.11, 213–18.
20.
HinsieL. E.ShatzkyJ. (1940) Psychiatric Dictionary. London, Oxford Medical Publications.
21.
HuapayaL. (1979) Seven cases of somnambulism induced by drugs. Am. J. Psychiat.136, 985–6.
22.
KalesJ.KalesA. A.SoldatesC.ChamberlainK.MartinE. (1979) Sleepwalking and night terrors related to febrile illness. Am. J. Psychiat.136, 1214–17.
23.
KalesA.SoldatesC.BixlerE.LaddaR.CharneyD.WeberG.SchweitzerP. (1980) Hereditary factors in sleepwalking and night terrors. Br. J. Psychiat.137, 111–18.
24.
KlackenbergG. (1982) Somnambulism in childhood — prevalence, course and behavioural correlates. Acta Paediatrica Scand.71, 495–9.
25.
KleitmanN. (1963) Sleep and Wakefulness. Chicago, University of Chicago Press.
26.
LangeluddekeA. (1955) Delikte in schlafzustande. Der Nervenarzt26, 28–30.
27.
NadelC. (1981) Somnambulism, bedtime medication and overeating. Br. J. Psychiat.139, 79–83.
28.
RechtschaffenA.KalesA. (1968) A manual of standardised terminology, techniques and scoring systems for sleep stages of human subjects. BIS/BRI, UCLA.
29.
RothB.NevsimalovaS.RechtschaffenA. (1972) Arch. Gen. Psychiat.26, 456.
30.
SakaiK.SastreJ. P.DanamoriN.JuvetM. (1981) State-specific neurones in the ponto-medullary reticular formation with special reference to the postural atonia during paradoxical sleep in the cat. In: PompeianoO.MarsanC. (eds) Brain Mechanisms of Perceptual Awareness and Purposeful Behaviour. New York, Raven Press, pp. 405–29.
31.
SchenckC.BundlieS.EttingerM.MahowaldM. (1986) Chronic behaviour disorders of human REM sleep: a new category of parasomnia. Sleep9, 293–308.
32.
SoursJ.FrumkinP.IndermillR. (1963) Somnambulism. Arch. Gen. Psychiat.9, 400.
33.
ThomasC.PedersenL. (1963) Psychobiological studies: sleep habits of healthy young adults, with observations on levels of cholesterol and circulating eosinophils. J. Chron. Dis.16, 1099–114.