Spatial-Temporal Analysis of Neural Desynchronization in Sleeplike States Reveals Critical Dynamics

ORAL

Abstract

Sleep is traditionally divided into two global brain states: non-rapid eye movement (non-REM) sleep, characterized by synchronized neuronal activity, and rapid eye movement (REM) sleep, marked by desynchronized, wake-like dynamics. With some exceptions, these two states were long considered mutually exclusive global brain states -- the brain periodically switched between one and the other during sleep. While recent research has begun to suggest otherwise, the technological trade-offs between high spatial and high temporal resolution neurophysiological recordings has made studying the spatial properties of REM challenging. However, advances in wide-field voltage-sensitive dye imaging in mice now offer both high spatial and temporal resolution, allowing us to study the spatio-temporal properties of REM and non-REM.

Using a urethane-anesthetized mouse model of sleep, we apply time-frequency analysis to identify how REM- and non-REM-like activity patterns evolve over space and time on the cortical surface. We find that if spatial information is ignored (e.g., using single-point probes as is traditionally used to study REM) we reproduce the conventional picture of global REM/non-REM transitions. However, when spatial information is incorporated, we observe transient REM occurs heterogeneously across the cortical surface with pockets of desychronized activity in a background of synchronized neural activity. These desynchronized REM clusters are distributed in a scale-free manner across the cortex, consistent with critical dynamics and suggestive of a phase transition at the boundary between synchronization and desynchronization. Understanding these spatio-temporal patterns not only offers new insight into brain-state transitions but may also shed light on disorders such as Alzheimer’s disease, which disrupt sleep architecture (e.g., reduced REM time) and quality of sleep for patients.

*This work was supported by the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (DG grants 40352 (MHM) and 05221 (JD)), Alberta Innovates Technology Futures, and the Killam Trusts (DC).

Publication: Spatial-Temporal Analysis of Neural Desynchronization in Sleeplike States Reveals Critical Dynamics
D. Curic, S. Singh, M. Nazari, M. H. Mohajerani, and J.A. Davidsen, Phys. Rev. Lett. 2024
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.132.218403

Presenters

  • Davor Curic

    • University of Calgary

Authors

  • Davor Curic

    • University of Calgary
  • Jorn A Davidsen

    • University of Calgary