4.5 Article

NREM-REM alternation complicates transitions from napping to non-napping behavior in a three-state model of sleep-wake regulationD

Journal

MATHEMATICAL BIOSCIENCES
Volume 355, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.mbs.2022.108929

Keywords

Sleep-wake regulation; Rapid Eye Movement (REM) sleep; Non-REM (NREM) sleep; NREM-REM alternation; Circle maps; Bifurcations; Piecewise-smooth systems

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The temporal structure of human sleep changes across development from polyphasic sleep to single nighttime sleep episode in adults. This study investigates the interaction between sleep architecture and changes in sleep dynamics using a mathematical model. The model analyzes the bifurcations of circle maps representing sleep patterns, identifying disruptions in the transition from biphasic to monophasic sleep. The study shows that the dynamics of NREM-REM alternation play a role in the wide interindividual variation in sleep patterns during the transition from napping to non-napping behavior in young children.
The temporal structure of human sleep changes across development as it consolidates from the polyphasic sleep of infants to the single nighttime sleep episode typical in adults. Experimental studies have shown that changes in the dynamics of sleep need may mediate this developmental transition in sleep patterning, however, it is unknown how sleep architecture interacts with these changes. We employ a physiologically -based mathematical model that generates wake, rapid eye movement (REM) and non-REM (NREM) sleep states to investigate how NREM-REM alternation affects the transition in sleep patterns as the dynamics of the homeostatic sleep drive are varied. To study the mechanisms producing these transitions, we analyze the bifurcations of numerically-computed circle maps that represent key dynamics of the full sleep-wake network model by tracking the evolution of sleep onsets across different circadian (similar to 24 h) phases. The maps are non-monotonic and discontinuous, being composed of branches that correspond to sleep-wake cycles containing distinct numbers of REM bouts. As the rates of accumulation and decay of the homeostatic sleep drive are varied, we identify the bifurcations that disrupt a period-adding-like behavior of sleep patterns in the transition between biphasic and monophasic sleep. These bifurcations include border collision and saddle-node bifurcations that initiate new sleep patterns, period-doubling bifurcations leading to higher-order patterns of NREM-REM alternation, and intervals of bistability of sleep patterns with different NREM-REM alternations. Furthermore, patterns of NREM-REM alternation exhibit variable behaviors in different regimes of constant sleep-wake patterns. Overall, the sequence of sleep-wake behaviors, and underlying bifurcations, in the transition from biphasic to monophasic sleep in this three-state model is more complex than behavior observed in models of sleep-wake regulation that do not consider the dynamics of NREM-REM alternation. These results suggest that interactions between the dynamics of the homeostatic sleep drive and the dynamics of NREM-REM alternation may contribute to the wide interindividual variation observed when young children transition from napping to non-napping behavior.

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