Abstract
AbstractHere, using data from two independent studies, we examine whether all of sleep is restorative or paradoxically whether some sleep processes incur a sleep debt that impacts next-day wakefulness. Specifically, we examine whether rapid eye movement (REM) sleep is such a process due to its similarity to wake activity, which is causal for sleep debt. To investigate this, we first develop a novel measure of REM neural activity (REM-like oscillatory theta activity (OTA)), overcoming limitations of current sleep scoring. We find that naturally occurring average REM-like OTA across individuals: 1) is associated with increased neurobehavioral sleep debt; 2) explains 25-38% (p ≤ 0.001) of sleep debt differences across individuals the following day; 3) occurs throughout sleep to various degrees, contrary to current sleep scoring; and 4) can be measured automatically, without cumbersome manual scoring.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory