Cortical Firing and Sleep Homeostasis
University of Wisconsin–Madison · Scuola Superiore Sant'Anna
Abstract
The need to sleep grows with the duration of wakefulness and dissipates with time spent asleep, a process called sleep homeostasis. What are the consequences of staying awake on brain cells, and why is sleep needed? Surprisingly, we do not know whether the firing of cortical neurons is affected by how long an animal has been awake or asleep. Here, we found that after sustained wakefulness cortical neurons fire at higher frequencies in all behavioral states. During early NREM sleep after sustained wakefulness, periods of population activity (ON) are short, frequent, and associated with synchronous firing, while periods of neuronal silence are long and frequent. After sustained sleep, firing rates and synchrony…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 17.00
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 89
Authors
8Topics & keywords
- Wakefulness
- Non-rapid eye movement sleep
- Sleep (system call)
- Neuroscience
- Population
- Neuroscience of sleep
- Psychology
- Electroencephalography