You were asleep but swear you weren’t : what is paradoxical insomnia ?
We don’t always know when we’re asleep or awake. This can affect how rested we feel In 2018, Hannah Scott, a sleep researcher at Flinders University, waited for a woman to fall asleep. This can take time when the subject is connected to equipment measuring brain activity, eye movement, heart (…)
Site référencé:
The Guardian (Africa)
3000.jpg?width=140&quality=85&auto=format&fit=max&s=9fd412333d83b7998c2991706fff6e81, 3000.jpg?width=460&quality=85&auto=format&fit=max&s=c99801a681aeacc68d21bbd2e26ae747, 3000.jpg?width=700&quality=85&auto=format&fit=max&s=3c71d0d06528a7462d33ee1346717406
The Guardian (Africa)
José Pizarro’s recipe for pumpkin and spinach with pimenton
28/10/2025
‘Mud on our hands ; blood on his’ : fury lingers one year after Spain’s deadly floods
28/10/2025
Jimmy Carr’s Am I the A**hole ? review – the idea for this comedy panel show is one of TV’s laziest
28/10/2025
‘DeepSeek is humane. Doctors are more like machines’ : my mother’s worrying reliance on AI for health advice
28/10/2025
‘It’s more about life than death’ : the growing popularity of Berlin’s cemetery cafes
28/10/2025
Wind power has cut £104bn from UK energy costs since 2010, study finds
28/10/2025