Hertie-Institute for Clinical Brain Research, University Medical Center Tübingen, Otfried-Müller Str. 27, Tübingen 72076, Germany.
Hertie-Institute for Clinical Brain Research, University Medical Center Tübingen, Otfried-Müller Str. 27, Tübingen 72076, Germany; Department of Anesthesiology and Intensive Care Medicine, University Medical Center Tübingen, Hoppe-Seyler-Str 3, Tübingen 72076, Germany.
Prog Neurobiol. 2024 Nov;242:102672. doi: 10.1016/j.pneurobio.2024.102672. Epub 2024 Oct 4.
Sleep constitutes a brain state of disengagement from the external world that supports memory consolidation and restores cognitive resources. The precise mechanisms how sleep and its varied stages support information processing remain largely unknown. Synaptic scaling models imply that daytime learning accumulates neural information, which is then consolidated and downregulated during sleep. Currently, there is a lack of in-vivo data from humans and rodents that elucidate if, and how, sleep renormalizes information processing capacities. From an information-theoretical perspective, a consolidation process should entail a reduction in neural pattern variability over the course of a night. Here, in a cross-species intracranial study, we identify a tradeoff in the neural population code during sleep where information coding efficiency is higher in the neocortex than in hippocampal archicortex in humans than in rodents as well as during wakefulness compared to sleep. Critically, non-REM sleep selectively reduces information coding efficiency through pattern repetition in the neocortex in both species, indicating a transition to a more robust information coding regime. Conversely, the coding regime in the hippocampus remained consistent from wakefulness to non-REM sleep. These findings suggest that new information could be imprinted to the long-term mnemonic storage in the neocortex through pattern repetition during sleep. Lastly, our results show that task engagement increased coding efficiency, while medically-induced unconsciousness disrupted the population code. In sum, these findings suggest that neural pattern variability could constitute a fundamental principle underlying cognitive engagement and memory formation, while pattern repetition reflects robust coding, possibly underlying the consolidation process.
睡眠是一种与外界隔离的大脑状态,它支持记忆巩固和恢复认知资源。睡眠及其不同阶段如何支持信息处理的精确机制在很大程度上仍然未知。突触缩放模型表明,白天的学习会积累神经信息,然后在睡眠期间进行巩固和下调。目前,缺乏来自人类和啮齿动物的体内数据来阐明睡眠是否以及如何恢复信息处理能力。从信息论的角度来看,巩固过程应该涉及到夜间神经模式可变性的降低。在这里,在一个跨物种的颅内研究中,我们在睡眠期间的神经群体编码中发现了一种权衡,即在人类和啮齿动物中,与睡眠相比,新皮层的信息编码效率高于海马弓状皮质,而在清醒状态下则高于睡眠状态。至关重要的是,非快速眼动睡眠通过两种物种的新皮层中的模式重复选择性地降低了信息编码效率,表明向更稳健的信息编码模式转变。相反,海马体的编码模式从清醒到非快速眼动睡眠保持一致。这些发现表明,新信息可以通过睡眠期间的模式重复来印记到新皮层的长期记忆存储中。最后,我们的结果表明,任务参与度提高了编码效率,而医学诱导的无意识状态则破坏了群体编码。总之,这些发现表明,神经模式可变性可能构成认知参与和记忆形成的基本原理,而模式重复反映了稳健的编码,可能是巩固过程的基础。