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Sleep Modulates Neural Timescales and Spatiotemporal Integration in the Human Cortex

Medicine and Health

Sleep Modulates Neural Timescales and Spatiotemporal Integration in the Human Cortex

R. Cusinato, A. Seiler, et al.

Spontaneous neural dynamics across scales reshape during sleep: intracranial EEG in 106 patients reveals that broadband and gamma timescales lengthen in sleep yet diverge across the cortical hierarchy, with slow waves linked to broadband changes and distinct spatiotemporal integration patterns. Research conducted by Riccardo Cusinato, Andrea Seiler, Kaspar Schindler, and Athina Tzovara.... show more
Abstract
Spontaneous neural dynamics manifest across multiple temporal and spatial scales, which are thought to be intrinsic to brain areas and exhibit hierarchical organization across the cortex. In wake, a hierarchy of timescales is thought to naturally emerge from microstructural properties, gene expression, and recurrent connections. A fundamental question is timescales' organization and changes in sleep, where physiological needs are different. Here, we describe two measures of neural timescales, obtained from broadband activity and gamma power, which display complementary properties. We leveraged intracranial electroencephalography in 106 human epilepsy patients (48 females) to characterize timescale changes from wake to sleep across the cortical hierarchy. We show that both broadband and gamma timescales are globally longer in sleep than in wake. While broadband timescales increase along the sensorimotor-association axis, gamma ones decrease. During sleep, slow waves can explain the increase of broadband and gamma timescales, but only broadband ones show a positive association with slow-wave density across the cortex. Finally, we characterize spatial correlations and their relationship with timescales as a proxy for spatiotemporal integration, finding high integration at long distances in wake for broadband and at short distances in sleep for gamma timescales. Our results suggest that mesoscopic neural populations possess different timescales that are shaped by anatomy and are modulated by the sleep/wake cycle.
Publisher
The Journal of Neuroscience
Published On
Apr 09, 2025
Authors
Riccardo Cusinato, Andrea Seiler, Kaspar Schindler, Athina Tzovara
Tags
neural timescales
sleep-wake cycle
intracranial EEG
broadband activity
gamma power
cortical hierarchy
spatiotemporal integration
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