Stephan Aurélie M, Cataldi Jacinthe, Singh Virk Amrita, Siclari Francesca
Center for Investigation and Research on Sleep, Lausanne University Hospital, 1011 Lausanne, Switzerland; The Sense Innovation and Research Center, 1007 Lausanne and Sion, Switzerland; The Netherlands Institute for Neuroscience, 1105 BA Amsterdam, the Netherlands.
Center for Investigation and Research on Sleep, Lausanne University Hospital, 1011 Lausanne, Switzerland; The Sense Innovation and Research Center, 1007 Lausanne and Sion, Switzerland.
Curr Biol. 2025 Aug 18;35(16):3812-3824.e3. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2025.06.064. Epub 2025 Jul 16.
How does the brain awaken from sleep? Several studies have suggested that the awakening process occurs asynchronously across brain regions, but the precise nature of these changes and how they are reflected in human electroencephalography (EEG) remains unknown. Here, we recorded 1,073 awakenings and arousals with high-density EEG and mapped brain activity at a second-to-second timescale around movement onset using source modeling. We found that cortical activity upon awakening progressed along highly consistent spatial and frequency gradients. In awakenings and arousals from non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep, transient increases in low-frequency power preceded increases in high-frequency power by a few seconds, whereas awakenings from REM sleep were mainly characterized by increases in high-frequency power. Regardless of sleep stage, high-frequency changes were first seen in frontal and last in occipital and inferior-temporal cortical areas, whereas low-frequency changes in NREM sleep started in a centro-parietal "hotspot," progressed frontally, and reached occipital and inferior-temporal regions last. Finally, the presence of these spatio-temporal arousal patterns during sleep, before participants were awakened by sounds, was followed by lower sleepiness ratings upon awakening. These results indicate a consistent spatio-temporal EEG signature of the awakening process that likely reflects the structural organization of arousal systems. Importantly, a transient increase in slow EEG frequencies, which are normally associated with sleep, is inherent to the arousal process and functionally correlates with feeling more awake when awakening from NREM sleep. These findings have important implications for the interpretation of arousal signals and the detection of incomplete awakenings in sleep disorders.
大脑是如何从睡眠中苏醒的?多项研究表明,苏醒过程在大脑各区域异步发生,但这些变化的精确性质以及它们如何在人类脑电图(EEG)中体现仍不清楚。在此,我们使用高密度脑电图记录了1073次苏醒和觉醒事件,并通过源模型在运动开始前后以秒为时间尺度绘制大脑活动图。我们发现,苏醒时的皮层活动沿着高度一致的空间和频率梯度发展。在从非快速眼动(NREM)睡眠中苏醒和觉醒时,低频功率的短暂增加比高频功率的增加提前几秒,而从快速眼动(REM)睡眠中苏醒主要表现为高频功率增加。无论睡眠阶段如何,高频变化首先出现在额叶,最后出现在枕叶和颞下回皮质区域,而NREM睡眠中的低频变化始于中央顶叶“热点”,向前发展,最后到达枕叶和颞下回区域。最后,在参与者被声音唤醒之前,睡眠期间这些时空觉醒模式的出现与苏醒时较低的困倦评分相关。这些结果表明了苏醒过程中一致的时空脑电图特征,这可能反映了觉醒系统的结构组织。重要的是,脑电图慢频率的短暂增加通常与睡眠相关,这是觉醒过程所固有的,并且在从NREM睡眠中苏醒时与感觉更清醒在功能上相关。这些发现对觉醒信号的解释以及睡眠障碍中不完全苏醒的检测具有重要意义。