Overnight changes in performance fatigability and their relationship to modulated deep sleep oscillations via auditory stimulation.

IF 3.4 3区 医学 Q2 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
Manuel Carro-Domínguez, Stephanie Huwiler, Fabia M Stich, Rossella Sala, Florent Aziri, Anna Trippel, Caroline Heimhofer, Reto Huber, Sarah Nadine Meissner, Nicole Wenderoth, Caroline Lustenberger
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Abstract

Deep sleep oscillations are proposed to be central in restoring brain function and to affect different aspects of motor performance such as facilitating the consolidation of motor sequences resulting in faster and more accurate sequence tapping. Yet, whether deep sleep modulates performance fatigability during fatiguing tasks remains unexplored. We investigated overnight changes in tapping speed and resistance against performance fatigability via a finger tapping task. During fast tapping, fatigability manifests as a reduction in speed (or "motor slowing") which affects all tapping tasks, including motor sequences used to study motor memory formation. We further tested whether overnight changes in performance fatigability are influenced by enhancing deep sleep oscillations using auditory stimulation. We found an overnight increase in tapping speed alongside a reduction in performance fatigability and perceived workload. Auditory stimulation led to a global enhancement of slow waves and both slow and fast spindles during the stimulation window and a local increase in slow spindles in motor areas across the night. However, overnight performance improvements were not significantly modulated by auditory stimulation and changes in tapping speed or performance fatigability were not predicted by individual changes in deep sleep oscillations. Our findings demonstrate overnight changes in fatigability but revealed no evidence suggesting that this effect is causally linked to temporary augmentation of slow waves or sleep spindles. Our results are important for future studies using tapping tasks to test the relationship between sleep and motor memory consolidation, as overnight changes in objectively measured and subjectively perceived fatigue likely impact behavioural outcomes.

通过听觉刺激,一夜之间表现疲劳的变化及其与调节深睡眠振荡的关系。
深度睡眠振荡被认为是恢复大脑功能的核心,并对运动表现的不同方面产生影响,如促进运动序列的巩固,从而使序列敲击更快、更准确。然而,深度睡眠是否会调节疲劳任务中的表现疲劳性仍有待研究。我们通过一项手指敲击任务研究了敲击速度和抵抗力在一夜之间的变化,以对抗表现疲劳。在快速敲击过程中,疲劳表现为速度降低(或 "运动减慢"),这会影响所有敲击任务,包括用于研究运动记忆形成的运动序列。我们进一步测试了利用听觉刺激增强深层睡眠振荡是否会影响夜间疲劳表现的变化。我们发现,敲击速度在一夜之间有所提高,同时表现疲劳度和感知工作量也有所降低。听觉刺激可在刺激窗口期间全面增强慢波以及慢速和快速棘波,并在整个夜间增强运动区的局部慢速棘波。然而,听觉刺激并不能显著调节夜间表现的提高,深睡眠振荡的个体变化也不能预测敲击速度或表现疲劳度的变化。我们的研究结果表明了夜间疲劳性的变化,但没有证据表明这种效应与慢波或睡眠棘波的暂时增强有因果关系。我们的研究结果对今后使用敲击任务测试睡眠与运动记忆巩固之间关系的研究非常重要,因为客观测量和主观感知的疲劳度的夜间变化可能会影响行为结果。
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来源期刊
Journal of Sleep Research
Journal of Sleep Research 医学-临床神经学
CiteScore
9.00
自引率
6.80%
发文量
234
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of Sleep Research is dedicated to basic and clinical sleep research. The Journal publishes original research papers and invited reviews in all areas of sleep research (including biological rhythms). The Journal aims to promote the exchange of ideas between basic and clinical sleep researchers coming from a wide range of backgrounds and disciplines. The Journal will achieve this by publishing papers which use multidisciplinary and novel approaches to answer important questions about sleep, as well as its disorders and the treatment thereof.
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