Communications Biology (Jul 2025)

Visuoaffective day residue in hypnagogia involves sequential bihemispheric interactions between cortical, subcortical, and cerebellar structures

  • George Vagner Souza,
  • Natália Bezerra Mota,
  • Allan Kardec Barros,
  • Sidarta Ribeiro

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s42003-025-08429-6
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

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Abstract The intricate interplay between visual perception and emotion determines how waking experience influences mentation through a ‘day residue’ at once conspicuous yet hard to predict. Here we set out to map the neural sources associated with the visuo-affective processing of the ‘day residue’ during hypnagogic sleep. To this end, we assessed 28 healthy participants on a combined nap protocol with serial awakenings, pre-sleep stimulation with affective visual images, yoked measures of the semantic similarity between image and imagery reports, affect ratings, estimation of 64-channel EEG sources, and functional connectivity analysis. Overall, low-frequency EEG power was associated with weaker residues, and high-frequency EEG power was associated with stronger residues. The source networks most significantly correlated with imagetic and affective residues were markedly different across wake-sleep states, partially overlapping with the default mode network during N1 for up to 50% and 61%, respectively. The results allowed us to identify neural correlates of the visuo-affective processing of the day’s residue, showing that the hypnagogic processing of the waking experience involves complex, dynamic and sequential bi-hemispheric interactions among multiple cortical, subcortical, and cerebellar structures with visual, limbic, optokinetic, and cognitive functions.