鸣禽的局部睡眠:鸟类腭部不同的同步睡眠状态。

IF 3.4 3区 医学 Q2 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY Journal of Sleep Research Pub Date : 2024-10-19 DOI:10.1111/jsr.14344
Hamed Yeganegi, Janie M Ondracek
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引用次数: 0

摘要

清醒和睡眠通常被视为截然不同的整体大脑状态。然而,有关睡眠阶段局部调节的新证据挑战了这一传统观点。除了单半球睡眠外,目前支持睡眠期间神经振荡局部变化的数据主要集中在局部睡眠的稳态调节,即清醒活动之前的作用。在此,为了研究自然睡眠期间大脑活动的局部差异,我们在不干扰先前清醒状态的情况下记录了斑马雀腭部多个部位的脑电图和局部场电位。我们对每个胼胝体部位的睡眠阶段进行了独立评分,结果发现睡眠阶段并不是整个胼胝体的现象,而是在不同电极部位有很大偏差。重要的是,较深的电极部位在确定睡眠状态一致性的时间方面起着主导作用。总之,这些研究结果表明,鸟类大脑中也会出现睡眠振荡的局部调节,而无需事先清醒地招募特定的枕叶回路,也不存在哺乳动物的皮层神经结构。
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Local sleep in songbirds: different simultaneous sleep states across the avian pallium.

Wakefulness and sleep have often been treated as distinct and global brain states. However, an emerging body of evidence on the local regulation of sleep stages challenges this conventional view. Apart from unihemispheric sleep, the current data that support local variations of neural oscillations during sleep are focused on the homeostatic regulation of local sleep, i.e., the role preceding awake activity. Here, to examine local differences in brain activity during natural sleep, we recorded the electroencephalogram and the local field potential across multiple sites within the avian pallium of zebra finches without perturbing the previous awake state. We scored the sleep stages independently in each pallial site and found that the sleep stages are not pallium-wide phenomena but rather deviate widely across electrode sites. Importantly, deeper electrode sites had a dominant role in defining the temporal aspects of sleep state congruence. Altogether, these findings show that local regulation of sleep oscillations also occurs in the avian brain without prior awake recruitment of specific pallial circuits and in the absence of mammalian cortical neural architecture.

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来源期刊
Journal of Sleep Research
Journal of Sleep Research 医学-临床神经学
CiteScore
9.00
自引率
6.80%
发文量
234
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of Sleep Research is dedicated to basic and clinical sleep research. The Journal publishes original research papers and invited reviews in all areas of sleep research (including biological rhythms). The Journal aims to promote the exchange of ideas between basic and clinical sleep researchers coming from a wide range of backgrounds and disciplines. The Journal will achieve this by publishing papers which use multidisciplinary and novel approaches to answer important questions about sleep, as well as its disorders and the treatment thereof.
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