Abstract

As we fall sleep, our brain traverses a series of gradual changes at physiological, behavioural and cognitive levels, which are not yet fully understood. The loss of responsiveness is a critical event in the transition from wakefulness to sleep. Here we seek to understand the electrophysiological signatures that reflect the loss of capacity to respond to external stimuli during drowsiness using two complementary methods: spectral connectivity and EEG microstates. Furthermore, we integrate these two methods for the first time by investigating the connectivity patterns captured during individual microstate lifetimes. While participants performed an auditory semantic classification task, we allowed them to become drowsy and unresponsive. As they stopped responding to the stimuli, we report the breakdown of alpha networks and the emergence of theta connectivity. Further, we show that the temporal dynamics of all canonical EEG microstates slow down during unresponsiveness. We identify a specific microstate (D) whose occurrence and duration are prominently increased during this period. Employing machine learning, we show that the temporal properties of microstate D, particularly its prolonged duration, predicts the response likelihood to individual stimuli. Finally, we find a novel relationship between microstates and brain networks as we show that microstate D uniquely indexes significantly stronger theta connectivity during unresponsiveness. Our findings demonstrate that the transition to unconsciousness is not linear, but rather consists of an interplay between transient brain networks reflecting different degrees of sleep depth.

Highlights

  • IntroductionOur brain traverses a series of changes which accompany the loss of sensory awareness and responsiveness to the external world

  • As we fall asleep, our brain traverses a series of changes which accompany the loss of sensory awareness and responsiveness to the external world

  • We investigate for the first time how spectral connectivity and EEG microstate dynamics interact as we lose responsiveness during drowsiness

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Summary

Introduction

Our brain traverses a series of changes which accompany the loss of sensory awareness and responsiveness to the external world. Despite the subjective ability to classify retrospectively one’s own state as “awake” or “asleep” (Hori et al 1994), research continues to unravel the gradual transitions happening at behavioural (Ogilvie and Wilkinson 1984), cellular (Steriade et al 1993), physiological (Prerau et al 2014) and cognitive (Goupil and Bekinschtein 2012) level, starting with early drowsiness and continuing into the deep stages of sleep (Ogilvie 2001). We are interested in the neural markers that predict our inability to respond as we drift to sleep

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