Magnetoencephalography Demonstrates Multiple Asynchronous Generators During Human Sleep Spindles

Author:

Dehghani Nima123,Cash Sydney S.2,Rossetti Andrea O.4,Chen Chih Chuan5,Halgren Eric1

Affiliation:

1. Multimodal Imaging Laboratory, Departments of Radiology and Neuroscience, University of California, San Diego, California;

2. Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging, and Department of Neurology, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts;

3. Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique Integrative and Computational Neuroscience Unit, UPR2191, Gif-sur-Yvette, France;

4. Service de Neurologie, Centre Universitaire Hospitalier Vaudois and Université de Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland; and

5. Department of Neurology, National Taiwan University Hospital, Taipei, Taiwan

Abstract

Sleep spindles are ∼1 s bursts of 10–16 Hz activity that occur during stage 2 sleep. Spindles are highly synchronous across the cortex and thalamus in animals, and across the scalp in humans, implying correspondingly widespread and synchronized cortical generators. However, prior studies have noted occasional dissociations of the magnetoencephalogram (MEG) from the EEG during spindles, although detailed studies of this phenomenon have been lacking. We systematically compared high-density MEG and EEG recordings during naturally occurring spindles in healthy humans. As expected, EEG was highly coherent across the scalp, with consistent topography across spindles. In contrast, the simultaneously recorded MEG was not synchronous, but varied strongly in amplitude and phase across locations and spindles. Overall, average coherence between pairs of EEG sensors was ∼0.7, whereas MEG coherence was ∼0.3 during spindles. Whereas 2 principle components explained ∼50% of EEG spindle variance, >15 were required for MEG. Each PCA component for MEG typically involved several widely distributed locations, which were relatively coherent with each other. These results show that, in contrast to current models based on animal experiments, multiple asynchronous neural generators are active during normal human sleep spindles and are visible to MEG. It is possible that these multiple sources may overlap sufficiently in different EEG sensors to appear synchronous. Alternatively, EEG recordings may reflect diffusely distributed synchronous generators that are less visible to MEG. An intriguing possibility is that MEG preferentially records from the focal core thalamocortical system during spindles, and EEG from the distributed matrix system.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology,General Neuroscience

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1. An Exploration of Optimal Parameters for Efficient Blind Source Separation of EEG Recordings Using AMICA;2023 IEEE 23rd International Conference on Bioinformatics and Bioengineering (BIBE);2023-12-04

2. A Framework to Evaluate Independent Component Analysis applied to EEG signal: testing on the Picard algorithm;2022 IEEE International Conference on Bioinformatics and Biomedicine (BIBM);2022-12-06

3. Waveform detection by deep learning reveals multi-area spindles that are selectively modulated by memory load;eLife;2022-06-29

4. Human Spindle Variability;The Journal of Neuroscience;2022-04-27

5. Human spindle variability;2021-09-03

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