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Cortical activation patterns herald successful dream recall after NREM and REM sleep

Cortical activation patterns herald successful dream recall after NREM and REM sleep
Cortical activation patterns herald successful dream recall after NREM and REM sleep
Dreaming pertains to both REM and NREM sleep. However, frequency and regional specific differences in EEG activity remains controversial. We investigated NREM and REM sleep EEG power density associated with and without dream recall in 17 young subjects during a 40-h multiple nap protocol under constant routine conditions. NREM sleep was associated with lower EEG power density for dream recall in the delta range, particularly in frontal derivations, and in the spindle range in centro-parietal derivations. REM sleep was associated with low frontal alpha activity and with high alpha and beta activity in occipital derivations. Our data indicate that specific EEG frequency- and topography changes underlie differences between dream recall and no recall after both NREM and REM sleep awakening. This dual NREM-REM sleep modulation holds strong implications for the mechanistic understanding of this complex ongoing cognitive process.
0301-0511
251-256
Chellappa, Sarah Laxhmi
516582b5-3cba-4644-86c9-14c91a4510f2
Frey, Sylvia
9242fbd1-e165-4242-aa2f-d81a5823365d
Knoblauch, Vera
88072dbd-a484-4a60-b887-ff6300899b21
Cajochen, Christian
f605e720-e417-45dc-9b5c-244b1a1d6265
Chellappa, Sarah Laxhmi
516582b5-3cba-4644-86c9-14c91a4510f2
Frey, Sylvia
9242fbd1-e165-4242-aa2f-d81a5823365d
Knoblauch, Vera
88072dbd-a484-4a60-b887-ff6300899b21
Cajochen, Christian
f605e720-e417-45dc-9b5c-244b1a1d6265

Chellappa, Sarah Laxhmi, Frey, Sylvia, Knoblauch, Vera and Cajochen, Christian (2011) Cortical activation patterns herald successful dream recall after NREM and REM sleep. Biological Psychology, 87 (2), 251-256. (doi:10.1016/j.biopsycho.2011.03.004).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Dreaming pertains to both REM and NREM sleep. However, frequency and regional specific differences in EEG activity remains controversial. We investigated NREM and REM sleep EEG power density associated with and without dream recall in 17 young subjects during a 40-h multiple nap protocol under constant routine conditions. NREM sleep was associated with lower EEG power density for dream recall in the delta range, particularly in frontal derivations, and in the spindle range in centro-parietal derivations. REM sleep was associated with low frontal alpha activity and with high alpha and beta activity in occipital derivations. Our data indicate that specific EEG frequency- and topography changes underlie differences between dream recall and no recall after both NREM and REM sleep awakening. This dual NREM-REM sleep modulation holds strong implications for the mechanistic understanding of this complex ongoing cognitive process.

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More information

e-pub ahead of print date: 17 March 2011
Published date: 1 May 2011

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 480260
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/480260
ISSN: 0301-0511
PURE UUID: 6f83d78d-f2b7-4d75-a8ea-e23923575574
ORCID for Sarah Laxhmi Chellappa: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-6190-464X

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Date deposited: 01 Aug 2023 17:13
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:21

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Contributors

Author: Sarah Laxhmi Chellappa ORCID iD
Author: Sylvia Frey
Author: Vera Knoblauch
Author: Christian Cajochen

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