PLoS ONE (Jan 2023)

Sleep disrupts complex spiking dynamics in the neocortex and hippocampus.

  • Joaquín González,
  • Matias Cavelli,
  • Adriano B L Tort,
  • Pablo Torterolo,
  • Nicolás Rubido

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0290146
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. 8
p. e0290146

Abstract

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Neuronal interactions give rise to complex dynamics in cortical networks, often described in terms of the diversity of activity patterns observed in a neural signal. Interestingly, the complexity of spontaneous electroencephalographic signals decreases during slow-wave sleep (SWS); however, the underlying neural mechanisms remain elusive. Here, we analyse in-vivo recordings from neocortical and hippocampal neuronal populations in rats and show that the complexity decrease is due to the emergence of synchronous neuronal DOWN states. Namely, we find that DOWN states during SWS force the population activity to be more recurrent, deterministic, and less random than during REM sleep or wakefulness, which, in turn, leads to less complex field recordings. Importantly, when we exclude DOWN states from the analysis, the recordings during wakefulness and sleep become indistinguishable: the spiking activity in all the states collapses to a common scaling. We complement these results by implementing a critical branching model of the cortex, which shows that inducing DOWN states to only a percentage of neurons is enough to generate a decrease in complexity that replicates SWS.