Left panel (A, B, C, and D). SD (hatched bar) at the 7AM onset of light period until 10AM significantly attenuated the ATP increase in all brain regions compared to the sleeping diurnal controls (n = 6, *P = 0. 01). When recovery sleep (RS, open bars) was permitted after 3 h SD, a surge in ATP occurred after a 3 h lag in basal forebrain and after a 6 h lag in frontal & cingulate cortex. Middle panel (E, F, G, and H). 3 h SD beginning at 10AM, when the ATP surge was maximal, caused a decline in ATP to levels lower than sleeping controls at 1PM (BF, P = 0.022; FC, P = 0.006; CCX, P = 0.004; HIPP, P = 0.004). When the 3 h SD was followed by 3 h of RS (1PM–4PM), ATP levels increased to levels significantly higher (*P < 0.01) than in diurnal controls (4PM) in basal forebrain and cingulate cortex, and equal to the diurnal control levels in frontal cortex and hippocampus. Right panel (I, J, K, L). 6 h sleep deprivation (SD, hatched box) markedly decreased ATP levels compared to diurnal controls in all brain regions (each *P < 0.05). In addition, a small but statistically significant decrease occurred to below the baseline (7AM) level in all brain regions (each **P < 0.05) except for FC, where the levels matched the baseline. In all brain regions, 3 h of RS (open bar) produced an ATP increase to levels that matched those of diurnal controls at 4PM.