Department of Neuroscience, Faculty of Medicine, University of Geneva, 1211 Geneva, Switzerland; Swiss Center for Affective Science, Campus Biotech, Geneva, 1211 Geneva, Switzerland.
Department of Neuroscience, Faculty of Medicine, University of Geneva, 1211 Geneva, Switzerland.
Curr Biol. 2019 Feb 4;29(3):402-411.e3. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2018.12.028. Epub 2019 Jan 24.
Sensory processing continues during sleep and can influence brain oscillations. We previously showed that a gentle rocking stimulation (0.25 Hz), during an afternoon nap, facilitates wake-sleep transition and boosts endogenous brain oscillations (i.e., EEG spindles and slow oscillations [SOs]). Here, we tested the hypothesis that the rhythmic rocking stimulation synchronizes sleep oscillations, a neurophysiological mechanism referred to as "neural entrainment." We analyzed EEG brain responses related to the stimulation recorded from 18 participants while they had a full night of sleep on a rocking bed. Moreover, because sleep oscillations are considered of critical relevance for memory processes, we also investigated whether rocking influences overnight declarative memory consolidation. We first show that, compared to a stationary night, continuous rocking shortened the latency to non-REM (NREM) sleep and strengthened sleep maintenance, as indexed by increased NREM stage 3 (N3) duration and fewer arousals. These beneficial effects were paralleled by an increase in SOs and in slow and fast spindles during N3, without affecting the physiological SO-spindle phase coupling. We then confirm that, during the rocking night, overnight memory consolidation was enhanced and also correlated with the increase in fast spindles, whose co-occurrence with the SO up-state is considered to foster cortical synaptic plasticity. Finally, supporting the hypothesis that a rhythmic stimulation entrains sleep oscillations, we report a temporal clustering of spindles and SOs relative to the rocking cycle. Altogether, these findings demonstrate that a continuous rocking stimulation strengthens deep sleep via the neural entrainment of intrinsic sleep oscillations.
感觉处理在睡眠期间持续进行,并能影响大脑的振荡。我们之前的研究表明,下午小睡时进行轻柔的摇摆刺激(0.25Hz),可以促进睡眠-觉醒转换,并增强内源性脑振荡(即 EEG 梭形波和慢振荡[SOs])。在这里,我们检验了这样一个假设,即有节奏的摇摆刺激会使睡眠振荡同步,这是一种被称为“神经同步”的神经生理机制。我们分析了 18 名参与者在摇摆床上睡满一整晚时记录的与刺激相关的 EEG 脑反应。此外,因为睡眠振荡被认为对记忆过程至关重要,所以我们还研究了摇摆是否会影响夜间陈述性记忆的巩固。我们首先表明,与静止的夜晚相比,连续的摇摆会缩短非快速眼动(NREM)睡眠的潜伏期,并增强睡眠的维持,这表现为 NREM 第 3 阶段(N3)的持续时间增加和觉醒次数减少。这些有益的影响与 SOs 的增加以及 N3 期间的慢和快梭形波的增加相平行,而不会影响生理 SO-梭形波相位耦合。然后,我们确认在摇摆的夜晚,夜间记忆巩固得到了增强,并且与快梭形波的增加相关,梭形波与 SO 上相的同时出现被认为可以促进皮质突触可塑性。最后,支持有节奏的刺激使睡眠振荡同步的假设,我们报告了与摇摆周期相关的梭形波和 SOs 的时间聚类。总之,这些发现表明,连续的摇摆刺激通过内在睡眠振荡的神经同步增强了深度睡眠。