“…[The last mentioned of these have also been called 'minute-order rhythms' (Corner et al, 2002Habets et al, 1987), 'super, c.q., big bursts' (Madhavan et al, 2007;Wagenaar et al, 2006a,b), or 'metastable state transitions' (Sasaki et al, 2007).] Suspected oscillations of still lower frequency, from >5 min up to $24 h, such as are known to exist the intact brain -designated as, respectively, 'tonic/phasic' (Corner, 1990;Orem, 1996;Takahara et al, 2002;Wehrle et al, 2007), 'circahoral' (Brodsky, 2006;Stupfel and Pavely, 1990), 'ultradian' (Corner, 1977;Lavie and Kripke, 1981) and 'circadian' (Dijk and von Schantz, 2005;Mirmiran et al, 1995Mirmiran et al, , 2003 rhythms -can be observed intermittently in longterm neocortical registrations from in vitro neocortex tissue (unpublished observations; also Van Pelt et al, 2004a,b;Wagenaar et al, 2006a) but seem not yet to have been systematically investigated. Fluctuations on the order of several hours have been noted for spontaneous motility in amphibian tadpoles (see Corner, 1977), so that this intermediate periodicity range between an hour ('circahoralian': see Brodsky, 2006) and a day ('circadian') deserves closer investigation.…”