Jourde Hugo R, Sobral Milo, Beltrame Giovanni, Coffey Emily B J
Department of Psychology, Concordia University, Montreal, QC, Canada.
International Laboratory for Brain, Music, and Sound Research (BRAMS), Montreal, QC, Canada.
Sleep Adv. 2025 Jul 7;6(2):zpaf007. doi: 10.1093/sleepadvances/zpaf007. eCollection 2025 Apr.
Sleep spindles are neural events unique to nonrapid eye movement sleep that play key roles in memory reactivation and consolidation. However, much of the evidence for their function remains correlational rather than causal. Closed-loop brain stimulation uses real-time monitoring of neural events (often via electroencephalography; EEG) to deliver precise auditory, magnetic, or electrical stimulation for research or therapeutic purposes. Automated online algorithms to detect and stimulate sleep spindles have recently been validated, but the time- and frequency-resolved physiological responses generated by them have not yet been documented. Building on the recent findings that sleep spindles do not block the transmission of sound to cortex, the present work investigates the neurophysiological responses to closed-loop auditory stimulation of sleep spindles. EEG data were collected from 10 healthy human adults (6 nights each), whilst sleep spindles were detected and in half the nights, targeted with auditory stimulation. Spindles were successfully stimulated before their offset in 97.6% of detections and did not disturb sleep. Comparing stimulation with sham, we observed that stimulation resulted in increased sigma activity (11-16 Hz) at about 1 second poststimulation but that stimulation occurring at the beginning of the spindle also resulted in early termination of the spindle. Finally, we observed that stimulating an evoked spindle did not elicit additional sigma activity. Our results validate the use of closed-loop auditory stimulation targeting sleep spindles, and document its neural effects, as a basis for future causal investigations concerning spindles' roles in memory consolidation.
睡眠纺锤波是非快速眼动睡眠特有的神经活动,在记忆再激活和巩固中起关键作用。然而,关于其功能的许多证据仍然是相关性的,而非因果性的。闭环脑刺激利用对神经活动的实时监测(通常通过脑电图;EEG)来提供精确的听觉、磁或电刺激,用于研究或治疗目的。最近,用于检测和刺激睡眠纺锤波的自动化在线算法已得到验证,但其产生的时间和频率分辨生理反应尚未得到记录。基于最近的研究发现,即睡眠纺锤波不会阻止声音向皮层的传递,本研究调查了对睡眠纺锤波闭环听觉刺激的神经生理反应。从10名健康成年人(每人6晚)收集EEG数据,同时检测睡眠纺锤波,并在一半的夜晚对其进行听觉刺激。在97.6%的检测中,纺锤波在其偏移之前成功受到刺激,且未干扰睡眠。将刺激与假刺激进行比较,我们观察到刺激在刺激后约1秒导致西格玛活动(11 - 16赫兹)增加,但在纺锤波开始时发生的刺激也导致纺锤波提前终止。最后,我们观察到刺激诱发的纺锤波不会引发额外的西格玛活动。我们的结果验证了针对睡眠纺锤波的闭环听觉刺激的应用,并记录了其神经效应,作为未来关于纺锤波在记忆巩固中作用的因果研究的基础。