New!Stay informed with our freeemail newsletter.
advertisement
Science News
from research organizations

Earthquake-like brain-wave bursts found to be essential for healthy sleep

Findings link healthy sleep to brain-wave bursts that mathematically mimic earthquakes

Date:
November 14, 2019
Source:
PLOS
Summary:
New research in rats shows that cortical arousals and brief awakenings during sleep exhibit non-equilibrium dynamics and complex organization across time scales necessary for spontaneous sleep-stage transitions and for maintaining healthy sleep.
Share:
advertisement

FULL STORY

New research in rats shows that cortical arousals and brief awakenings during sleep exhibit non-equilibrium dynamics and complex organization across time scales necessary for spontaneous sleep-stage transitions and for maintaining healthy sleep. Prof. Plamen Ch. Ivanov of Boston University and colleagues present these findings inPLOS Computational Biology.

Sleep is traditionally considered to be a homeostatic process that resists deviation from equilibrium. In that regard, brief episodes of waking are viewed as perturbations that lead to sleep fragmentation and related sleep disorders. While addressing aspects of sleep regulation related to consolidated sleep and wake and the sleep-wake cycle, the homeostatic paradigm does not account for the dozens of abrupt sleep-stage transitions and micro-states within sleep stages throughout the night. Ivanov and colleagues hypothesized that, while sleep is indeed homeostatic at time scales of hours and days, non-equilibrium dynamics and criticality underlie sleep micro-architecture at shorter time scales.

To test this hypothesis, the researchers collected electroencephalogram (EEG) recordings of brain activity over multiple days in normal rats and in rats with injuries to the parafacial zone, a brain region that helps regulate sleep. They analyzed the bursting dynamics of brain activity patterns known as theta waves and delta waves, which are seen in both sleeping rats and humans.

Their empirical findings and modeling indicate that arousals from sleep are a manifestation of an intrinsic non-equilibrium sleep regulatory mechanism related to self-organization of neuronal assemblies. This mechanism acts at time scales of seconds and minutes and stays on track via continuous bursts in brain wave rhythms.

研究还表明,保持non-equilibrium critical state is essential for the sleep-regulation system's flexibility to spontaneously activate multiple transitions between different sleep stages and between sleep and brief wakefulness throughout the sleep period. Such critical state is also necessary for the complex sleep micro-architecture that is increasingly recognized to be characteristic of healthy sleep. The observed critical behavior in sleep draws parallels to other non-equilibrium systems at criticality, such as earthquakes.

"Paradoxically, we find that the 'resting' state of healthy sleep is maintained through bursts in cortical rhythm activity that obey similar temporal organization, statistics, and mathematical laws as earthquakes," Ivanov says. "Our findings serve as building blocks to better understand sleep, and could help improve detection and treatment of sleep disorders."

advertisement

Story Source:

Materials provided byPLOS.注意:内容可能被编辑风格d length.


Journal Reference:

  1. Jilin W. J. L. Wang, Fabrizio Lombardi, Xiyun Zhang, Christelle Anaclet, Plamen Ch. Ivanov.Non-equilibrium critical dynamics of bursts in θ and δ rhythms as fundamental characteristic of sleep and wake micro-architecture.PLOS Computational Biology, 2019; 15 (11): e1007268 DOI:10.1371/journal.pcbi.1007268

Cite This Page:

PLOS. "Earthquake-like brain-wave bursts found to be essential for healthy sleep." ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 14 November 2019. /releases/2019/11/191114141237.htm>.
PLOS. (2019, November 14). Earthquake-like brain-wave bursts found to be essential for healthy sleep.ScienceDaily. Retrieved October 11, 2023 from www.koonmotors.com/releases/2019/11/191114141237.htm
PLOS. "Earthquake-like brain-wave bursts found to be essential for healthy sleep." ScienceDaily. www.koonmotors.com/releases/2019/11/191114141237.htm (accessed October 11, 2023).

Explore More
from ScienceDaily

RELATED STORIES