4.6 Article

RoWDI: rolling window detection of sleep intrusions in the awake brain using fMRI

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEURAL ENGINEERING
Volume 18, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/1741-2552/ac2bb9

Keywords

sleep; drowsiness; local sleep; vigilance; mental fatigue; sleep deprivation

Funding

  1. Faculty of Health Sciences Project Grant, Australian Catholic University
  2. Royal Society of New Zealand Marsden Grant
  3. Monash University Strategic Grant Scheme

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The study developed a method for detecting sleep-like events in awake humans using fMRI signal templates, allowing for analysis of these events in fMRI data. It found that frequent sleep-like events occurred during cognitive tasks after sleep deprivation, associated with a reduction in pupil size and prolonged response time, while co-existing with task-related brain activity.
Objective. Brief episodes of sleep can intrude into the awake human brain due to lack of sleep or fatigue-compromising the safety of critical daily tasks (i.e. driving). These intrusions can also introduce artefactual activity within functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) experiments, prompting the need for an objective and effective method of removing them. Approach. We have developed a method to track sleep-like events in awake humans via rolling window detection of intrusions (RoWDI) of fMRI signal template. These events can then be used in voxel-wise event-related analysis of fMRI data. To test this approach, we generated a template of fMRI activity associated with transition to sleep via simultaneous fMRI and electroencephalogram (EEG) (N = 10). RoWDI was then used to identify sleep-like events in 20 individuals performing a cognitive task during fMRI after a night of partial sleep deprivation. This approach was further validated in an independent fMRI dataset (N = 56). Main results. Our method (RoWDI) was able to infer frequent sleep-like events during the cognitive task performed after sleep deprivation. The sleep-like events were associated with on average of 20% reduction in pupil size and prolonged response time. The blood-oxygen-level-dependent activity during the sleep-like events covered thalami-cortical regions, which although spatially distinct, co-existed with, task-related activity. These key findings were validated in the independent dataset. Significance. RoWDI can reliably detect spontaneous sleep-like events in the human brain. Thus, it may also be used as a tool to delineate and account for neural activity associated with wake-sleep transitions in both resting-state and task-related fMRI studies.

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