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Sleep

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To discuss theories of sleep and dreaming, including the ... All mammals except dolphins & the spiny anteater show SWS & REM. Birds also show both. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Sleep


1
Sleep Dreaming
  • Keith Clements

2
Aims
  • To review the structure of sleep
  • To outline the brain mechanisms controlling sleep
  • To discuss theories of sleep and dreaming,
    including the relationship between sleep and
    memory consolidation.

3
Stages of sleep
  •         Identified by EEG (Aserinsky Kleitman,
    1953)
  •         5 stages with distinct EEG
    characteristics
  •         90 minute cycle throughout the night
  •         Distinction between SWS and REM sleep
  • REM accompanied by muscular paralysis
  •         The ratio of REM to SWS sleep changes
    over the lifespan

4
Dreaming
  • Once thought to occur only in REM sleep
  • Dement Kleitman (1957)
  • 80 report dreams from REM
  • 20 from non-REM
  • REM non-REM dreams differ (Hobson et al., 2000)
  • REM Longer, more vivid, more movement,
    emotionally charged, less related to waking life.
  • SWS Thoughts Concerns

5
Other species
  • All vertebrates show periods of inactivity
  • All mammals except dolphins the spiny anteater
    show SWS REM.
  • Birds also show both.
  • Sleep amounts vary across species

6
Brain Mechanisms
  • Sleep initially thought to start due to loss of
    sensory input
  • Later work emphasized the reticular formation as
    a system regulating arousal and alertness.  
  • Bremer (1930) showed that cutting through the
    brainstem at different points indicated that
    structures in the pons are involved in sleep
    staging. Sections through the midbrain produced
    permanent slow-wave sleep.

7
Basal Forebrain
  • Von Economos observations of Encephalitis
    Lethargica focussed attention on the hypothalamus
    and basal forebrain.
  • Release of GABA by forebrain neurons triggers SWS
    (Gallopin et al., 2000).
  • Narcolepsy and the hypothalamus
  • Narcolepsy result from damage to part of the
    hypothalamus.
  • Loss of hypothalamic neurons secreting hypocretin
    causes narcolepsy (Lin et al. 1999).
  • Hypothalamic neurons send axons to the basal
    forebrain and pons. May trigger sleep.

8
The reticular formation
  • The reticular formation, running through the
    pons, was viewed as a a system regulating arousal
    and alertness.
  • Several systems located in the brainstem are
    known to be involved in regulating aspects of
    sleep

9
Monoamine systems
  • Locus Coeruleus (in the Pons)
  • Origin of Noradrenergic fibres, diffuse
    projection.
  • Recording reveals activity during wakefulness
  • Many stimulants increase Noradrenergic activity
  • May suppress REM sleep
  • Raphe (In the Pons Medulla)
  • Origin of serotoninergic fibres
  • Recording reveals activity during wakefulness
  • Destruction produces temporary insomnia
    (especially REM)
  • Suppresses REM

10
REM sleep
  • Cholinergic neurons in the Pons appear to be
    involved in REM sleep
  • ACh Antagonists produce drowsiness
  • Nicotine is a stimulant
  • Release of ACh by ascending fibres correlates
    with activity
  • Mcarley Hobson (1975) proposed that NREM/REM
    switching was triggered by reciprocal inhibition
    between cholinergic aminergic systems.

11
Brain imaging studies
  • During slow wave sleep brain activity falls (e.g.
    Maquet et al, 1992, report 40 reduction in
    glucose utilization in stages 3 4)
  • In REM activation is localised to brainstem,
    limbic and paralimbic areas. Executive areas of
    frontal cortex are not activated (Maquet et al,
    1996 Nofzinger et al, 1997 Braun et al, 1997)

12
Why do we sleep?
  • Explanations include
  • To conserve energy
  • To avoid predators
  • Meddis (1975)
  • To restore the body
  • Growth hormone secretion peaks during sleep.
  • SWS increases after intense exercise (Shapiro et
    al 1981), but may reflect raised temperature
    (Horne Moore, 1984).
  • To aid learning
  • Sleep deprivation has clearer effects on
    procedural, than declarative learning.

13
Sleep Memory Consolidation
  • Stickgold (2005)
  • Three procedural tasks (visual discrimination,
    motor sequence learning motor adaptation) all
    show improvement after sleep.
  • Improvement correlates with specific sleep stages
    (SWS for all three, but also late REM for visual
    discrimination).
  • Sleep deprivation may also affect types of
    learning dependent on the hippocampus.

14
Why do we dream?
  • Neural exercise?
  • Hobson (1989) Activation-synthesis theory
  • Endogenous stimulation?
  • Memory Consolidation?
  • Drugs which reduce REM dont affect learning.
  • Animal studies (e.g. Maquet, 2001) suggest
    hippocampal activity during sleep recreates that
    during waking, but not specific to REM sleep.

15
References
  • Chapter 6 in Wickens (2005) or chapter 14 in
    Pinel (2009) cover sleep.
  • Stickgold R. (2005). Sleep-dependent memory
    consolidation. Nature, 437, 1272-1278 (27 October
    2005)
  • Further Reading
  • See articles by Hobson, Pace-Schott Stickgold
    and by Vertes Eastman in Behavioral Brain
    Sciences (2000), 23(6).
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