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Sleep Deprivation

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sleep deprivation

Discover seminars, jobs, and research tagged with sleep deprivation across World Wide.
8 curated items6 ePosters2 Seminars
Updated over 2 years ago
8 items · sleep deprivation
8 results
SeminarNeuroscience

Sleep deprivation and the human brain: from brain physiology to cognition”

Ali Salehinejad
Leibniz Research Centre for Working Environment & Human Factors, Dortmund, Germany
Aug 28, 2023

Sleep strongly affects synaptic strength, making it critical for cognition, especially learning and memory formation. Whether and how sleep deprivation modulates human brain physiology and cognition is poorly understood. Here we examined how overnight sleep deprivation vs overnight sufficient sleep affects (a) cortical excitability, measured by transcranial magnetic stimulation, (b) inducibility of long-term potentiation (LTP)- and long-term depression (LTD)-like plasticity via transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS), and (c) learning, memory, and attention. We found that sleep deprivation increases cortical excitability due to enhanced glutamate-related cortical facilitation and decreases and/or reverses GABAergic cortical inhibition. Furthermore, tDCS-induced LTP-like plasticity (anodal) abolishes while the inhibitory LTD-like plasticity (cathodal) converts to excitatory LTP-like plasticity under sleep deprivation. This is associated with increased EEG theta oscillations due to sleep pressure. Motor learning, behavioral counterparts of plasticity, and working memory and attention, which rely on cortical excitability, are also impaired during sleep deprivation. Our study indicates that upscaled brain excitability and altered plasticity, due to sleep deprivation, are associated with impaired cognitive performance. Besides showing how brain physiology and cognition undergo changes (from neurophysiology to higher-order cognition) under sleep pressure, the findings have implications for variability and optimal application of noninvasive brain stimulation.

SeminarNeuroscience

A paradoxical kind of sleep In Drosophila melanogaster

Bruno van Swinderen
University of Queensland
Apr 29, 2020

The dynamic nature of sleep in most animals suggests distinct stages which serve different functions. Genetic sleep induction methods in animal models provide a powerful way to disambiguate these stages and functions, although behavioural methods alone are insufficient to accurately identify what kind of sleep is being engaged. In Drosophila, activation of the dorsal fan-shaped body (dFB) promotes sleep, but it remains unclear what kind of sleep this is, how the rest of the fly brain is behaving, or if any specific sleep functions are being achieved. Here, we developed a method to record calcium activity from thousands of neurons across a volume of the fly brain during dFB-induced sleep, and we compared this to the effects of a sleep-promoting drug. We found that drug-induced spontaneous sleep decreased brain activity and connectivity, whereas dFB sleep was not different from wakefulness. Paradoxically, dFB-induced sleep was found to be even deeper than drug- induced sleep. When we probed the sleeping fly brain with salient visual stimuli, we found that the activity of visually-responsive neurons was blocked by dFB activation, confirming a disconnect from the external environment. Prolonged optogenetic dFB activation nevertheless achieved a significant sleep function, by correcting visual attention defects brought on by sleep deprivation. These results suggest that dFB activation promotes a distinct form of sleep in Drosophila, where brain activity and connectivity remain similar to wakefulness, but responsiveness to external sensory stimuli is profoundly suppressed.

ePoster

Restoring 'lost' memories: Efficacy of vardenafil to reverse amnesia following sleep deprivation

Camilla Paraciani, Pim R.A. Heckman, Onno C. van den Hoed, Diana M. Popescu, Elroy L. Meijer, Peter Meerlo, Robbert Havekes

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Sex-specific differences in hippocampal gene regulation following acute sleep deprivation

Lisa Lyons, Natalie Storch, Yann Vanrobaeys, William Pledger, Ted Abel

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Sleep deprivation impairs hippocampal CA2 synaptic plasticity and social memory in mice

Lik Wei Wong, Mohammad Zaki Bin Ibrahim, Aiswaria Lekshmi Kannan, Sreedharan Sajikumar

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Sleep deprivation improves behavioral performance in zebrafish larvae

Paula Pflitsch, Nadine Oury, Kumaresh Krishnan, William Joo, Kristian Herrera, Armin Bahl, Florian Engert, Hanna Zwaka

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Sleepless nights, vanishing faces: The effect of sleep deprivation on long-term social recognition memory in mice

Adithya Sarma, Evgeniya Tyumeneva, Junfei Cao, Soraya Smit, Marit Bonne, Fleur Meijer, Jean-Christophe Billeter, Robbert Havekes

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Transgenerational effects of sleep deprivation on imprinted genes regulation

Alice Melloni, Angelo Serani, Elisa Gelli, Gianluca Como, Alessia Polito, Robert Wolff, Valter Tucci

FENS Forum 2024