Abstract

Sensory gating is a process in which the brain’s response to a repetitive stimulus is attenuated; it is thought to contribute to information processing by enabling organisms to filter extraneous sensory inputs from the environment. To date, sensory gating has typically been used to determine whether brain function is impaired, such as in individuals with schizophrenia or addiction. In healthy subjects, sensory gating is sensitive to a subject’s behavioral state, such as acute stress and attention. The cortical response to sensory stimulation significantly decreases during sleep; however, information processing continues throughout sleep, and an auditory evoked potential (AEP) can be elicited by sound. It is not known whether sensory gating changes during sleep. Sleep is a non-uniform process in the whole brain with regional differences in neural activities. Thus, another question arises concerning whether sensory gating changes are uniform in different brain areas from waking to sleep. To address these questions, we used the sound stimuli of a Conditioning-testing paradigm to examine sensory gating during waking, rapid eye movement (REM) sleep and Non-REM (NREM) sleep in different cortical areas in rats. We demonstrated the following: 1. Auditory sensory gating was affected by vigilant states in the frontal and parietal areas but not in the occipital areas. 2. Auditory sensory gating decreased in NREM sleep but not REM sleep from waking in the frontal and parietal areas. 3. The decreased sensory gating in the frontal and parietal areas during NREM sleep was the result of a significant increase in the test sound amplitude.

Highlights

  • Sensory gating, a process in which the brain’s response to a repetitive stimulus is attenuated, is thought to contribute to information processing by enabling organisms to filter extraneousPLOS ONE | DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0126684 April 30, 2015State-Dependent Sensory Gating in Rats sensory inputs from the environment

  • We demonstrated vigilant states have effects on auditory sensory gating in the frontal and parietal areas but not the occipital areas

  • The decreased sensory gating during NREM sleep in the frontal and parietal areas resulted from the significant increase in the TAMP

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Summary

Introduction

A process in which the brain’s response to a repetitive stimulus is attenuated, is thought to contribute to information processing by enabling organisms to filter extraneousPLOS ONE | DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0126684 April 30, 2015State-Dependent Sensory Gating in Rats sensory inputs from the environment. Sensory gating can be adequately assessed using the sound stimuli of a Conditioning-testing paradigm, in which two identical auditory tones are presented 500 ms apart. Normal humans and rats exhibit a smaller response to the second (test) tone compared with the first (conditioning) tone [7, 8]. A positive wave that occurs 50 ms (P50) after the auditory stimuli represents a widely used auditory evoked potential (AEP) component to assess sensory gating in humans. A negative wave (N40) that occurs 40 ms after the auditory stimuli, which is considered analogous to the P50 recorded in humans, has generally been used [9,10,11]

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