Center for Lifespan Psychology, Max Planck Institute for Human Development, Berlin, Germany.
Department of Psychology, Laboratory for Sleep, Cognition and Consciousness Research, University of Salzburg, Salzburg, Austria.
Elife. 2023 Nov 24;12:e83565. doi: 10.7554/eLife.83565.
The synchronization of canonical fast sleep spindle activity (12.5-16 Hz, adult-like) precisely during the slow oscillation (0.5-1 Hz) up peak is considered an essential feature of adult non-rapid eye movement sleep. However, there is little knowledge on how this well-known coalescence between slow oscillations and sleep spindles develops. Leveraging individualized detection of single events, we first provide a detailed cross-sectional characterization of age-specific patterns of slow and fast sleep spindles, slow oscillations, and their coupling in children and adolescents aged 5-6, 8-11, and 14-18 years, and an adult sample of 20- to 26-year-olds. Critically, based on this, we then investigated how spindle and slow oscillation maturity substantiate age-related differences in their precise orchestration. While the predominant type of fast spindles was development-specific in that it was still nested in a frequency range below the canonical fast spindle range for the majority of children, the well-known slow oscillation-spindle coupling pattern was evident for sleep spindles in the adult-like canonical fast spindle range in all four age groups-but notably less precise in children. To corroborate these findings, we linked personalized measures of fast spindle maturity, which indicate the similarity between the prevailing development-specific and adult-like canonical fast spindles, and slow oscillation maturity, which reflects the extent to which slow oscillations show frontal dominance, with individual slow oscillation-spindle coupling patterns. Importantly, we found that fast spindle maturity was uniquely associated with enhanced slow oscillation-spindle coupling strength and temporal precision across the four age groups. Taken together, our results suggest that the increasing ability to generate adult-like canonical fast sleep spindles actuates precise slow oscillation-spindle coupling patterns from childhood through adolescence and into young adulthood.
典型快睡眠纺锤波活动(12.5-16 Hz,成人样)与慢波(0.5-1 Hz)上相精确同步被认为是成人非快速眼动睡眠的一个重要特征。然而,对于这种众所周知的慢波和睡眠纺锤波之间的融合是如何发展的,我们知之甚少。利用单个事件的个性化检测,我们首先详细描述了儿童和青少年(5-6 岁、8-11 岁和 14-18 岁)以及成人(20-26 岁)的慢波和快睡眠纺锤波、慢波及其耦合的特定年龄模式的横断面特征。至关重要的是,基于此,我们进一步研究了纺锤波和慢波的成熟度如何证实它们在精确协调方面的年龄相关差异。虽然快纺锤波的主要类型在发展上是特定的,因为它仍然嵌套在低于大多数儿童的典型快纺锤波频率范围,但在所有四个年龄组中,成人样典型快纺锤波范围内的睡眠纺锤波都表现出众所周知的慢波-纺锤波耦合模式,但在儿童中明显不那么精确。为了证实这些发现,我们将个性化的快纺锤波成熟度测量值(它表明占主导地位的发展特异性和成人样典型快纺锤波之间的相似性)与慢波成熟度(它反映了慢波呈现额叶优势的程度)与个体慢波-纺锤波耦合模式联系起来。重要的是,我们发现快纺锤波成熟度与四个年龄组的慢波-纺锤波耦合强度和时间精度的增强具有独特的相关性。总的来说,我们的结果表明,产生成人样典型快睡眠纺锤波的能力不断增强,从儿童期到青春期再到青年期,都会产生精确的慢波-纺锤波耦合模式。