Previous exposure to a stressor (cage exchange 5-6 hours before) induces Fos expression in neurons in both sleep-promoting areas (MnPO, VLPOc, and VLPOex), as well as in arousal systems, including the limbic system (IFC, BST, and CeA) and wake-promoting areas (TMN and LC). Fos expression was substantially lower in the clean cage controls (who were sleeping normally at this time) in all regions except in the sleep-promoting areas, MnPO and VLPOc, which was comparable to stressed animals. Rats with amounts of spontaneously occurring sleep (awake 50% of the time during the previous 90 min) similar to the amounts of sleep in stressed rats in hours 5 and 6 had lower Fos counts than stressed animals in all regions except in the TMN, where Fos counts are thought to mirror recent waking behavior. In a first analysis, we compared controls and stressed rats, using an unpaired t-test for each area, to determine whether there were differences in Fos expression due to the treatment (@ = for comparisons between these two groups, p<0.05). In a second analysis, we compared the three groups (controls, stressed rats, and rats spontaneously awake 50% of the time), using a one-way ANOVA followed by Fisher's PLSD, to determine whether the differences we observed in the first analysis were due to the fact that stressed rats were awake 50% of the time (* = for pair comparisons among the three groups, p<0.05). All values are the mean ± S.E.M. (MnPO = Median preoptic nucleus; VLPOc = ventrolateral preoptic nucleus core; VLPOex = ventrolateral preoptic nucleus extended part; IFC = infralimbic cortex; BST = bed nucleus of the stria terminalis; CeA = central nucleus of the amygdala; TMN= tuberomammillary nucleus; LC = locus coeruleus.