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SWS rebound is lengthening and increasing frequency and depth of [[wikipedia:Slow-wave_sleep|SWS]] sleep which occurs after periods of [[wikipedia:Sleep_deprivation|sleep deprivation]]. A longer duration of time spent in SWS, as well as a significant shortening of [[Scheduling overview#Sleep stages|NREM3]] and NREM4 latencies, are common signs of SWS rebound, as a study on a selective slow-wave sleep deprivation has shown.<ref>Ferrara M, De Gennaro L, Bertini M. Selective slow-wave sleep (SWS) deprivation and SWS rebound: do we need a fixed SWS amount per night. Sleep Res Online. 1999;2(1):15–9. - PubMed</ref>

{{See also|REM rebound}}

== Sleep-onset SWS ==
The slow-wave sleep latency shortens, which is also known as SOSWS or sleep-onset SWS. Generally polyphasic sleep schedules, which contain at least 3 full [[wikipedia:Sleep_cycle|sleep cycles]] in [[Cores|core(-s)]], rarely cause significant SWS loss. SOSWS is more common for extreme schedules, such as the [[Nap only|nap-only]] line. This mechanism causes entering SWS almost immediately, which allows to get SWS-filled [[naps]].
{{Further|SOSWS}}

== References ==
<references />
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