Frontoparietal Connectivity and Hierarchical Structure of the Brain’s Functional Network during Sleep

Frontal and parietal regions are associated with some of the most complex cognitive functions, and several frontoparietal resting-state networks can be observed in wakefulness. We used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) data acquired in polysomnographically validated wakefulness, light sle...

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Main Authors: Victor I Spoormaker, Pablo eGleiser, Michael eCzisch
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2012-05-01
Series:Frontiers in Neurology
Subjects:
EEG
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fneur.2012.00080/full
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spelling doaj-4210f078f06443a58299b0111da693c12020-11-24T23:15:28ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Neurology1664-22952012-05-01310.3389/fneur.2012.0008018578Frontoparietal Connectivity and Hierarchical Structure of the Brain’s Functional Network during SleepVictor I Spoormaker0Pablo eGleiser1Michael eCzisch2Max Planck Institute of PsychiatryCentro Atómico Bariloche, Instituto Balseiro, CONICETMax Planck Institute of PsychiatryFrontal and parietal regions are associated with some of the most complex cognitive functions, and several frontoparietal resting-state networks can be observed in wakefulness. We used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) data acquired in polysomnographically validated wakefulness, light sleep and slow-wave sleep to examine the hierarchical structure of a low-frequency functional brain network, and to examine whether frontoparietal connectivity would disintegrate in sleep. Whole-brain analyses with hierarchical cluster analysis on predefined atlases were performed, as well as regression of inferior parietal lobules seeds against all voxels in the brain, and an evaluation of the integrity of voxel time-courses in subcortical regions-of-interest. We observed that frontoparietal functional connectivity disintegrated in sleep stage 1 and was absent in deeper sleep stages. Slow-wave sleep was characterized by strong hierarchical clustering of local submodules. Frontoparietal connectivity between inferior parietal lobules and superior medial and right frontal gyrus was lower in sleep stages than in wakefulness. Moreover, thalamus voxels showed maintained integrity in sleep stage 1, making intrathalamic desynchronization an unlikely source of reduced thalamocortical connectivity in this sleep stage. Our data suggest a transition from a globally integrated functional brain network in wakefulness to a disintegrated network consisting of local submodules in slow-wave sleep, in which frontoparietal inter-modular nodes may play a crucial role, possibly in combination with the thalamus.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fneur.2012.00080/fullSleepEEGfMRIfunctional connectivityfrontoparietalhierarchy
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Victor I Spoormaker
Pablo eGleiser
Michael eCzisch
spellingShingle Victor I Spoormaker
Pablo eGleiser
Michael eCzisch
Frontoparietal Connectivity and Hierarchical Structure of the Brain’s Functional Network during Sleep
Frontiers in Neurology
Sleep
EEG
fMRI
functional connectivity
frontoparietal
hierarchy
author_facet Victor I Spoormaker
Pablo eGleiser
Michael eCzisch
author_sort Victor I Spoormaker
title Frontoparietal Connectivity and Hierarchical Structure of the Brain’s Functional Network during Sleep
title_short Frontoparietal Connectivity and Hierarchical Structure of the Brain’s Functional Network during Sleep
title_full Frontoparietal Connectivity and Hierarchical Structure of the Brain’s Functional Network during Sleep
title_fullStr Frontoparietal Connectivity and Hierarchical Structure of the Brain’s Functional Network during Sleep
title_full_unstemmed Frontoparietal Connectivity and Hierarchical Structure of the Brain’s Functional Network during Sleep
title_sort frontoparietal connectivity and hierarchical structure of the brain’s functional network during sleep
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Neurology
issn 1664-2295
publishDate 2012-05-01
description Frontal and parietal regions are associated with some of the most complex cognitive functions, and several frontoparietal resting-state networks can be observed in wakefulness. We used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) data acquired in polysomnographically validated wakefulness, light sleep and slow-wave sleep to examine the hierarchical structure of a low-frequency functional brain network, and to examine whether frontoparietal connectivity would disintegrate in sleep. Whole-brain analyses with hierarchical cluster analysis on predefined atlases were performed, as well as regression of inferior parietal lobules seeds against all voxels in the brain, and an evaluation of the integrity of voxel time-courses in subcortical regions-of-interest. We observed that frontoparietal functional connectivity disintegrated in sleep stage 1 and was absent in deeper sleep stages. Slow-wave sleep was characterized by strong hierarchical clustering of local submodules. Frontoparietal connectivity between inferior parietal lobules and superior medial and right frontal gyrus was lower in sleep stages than in wakefulness. Moreover, thalamus voxels showed maintained integrity in sleep stage 1, making intrathalamic desynchronization an unlikely source of reduced thalamocortical connectivity in this sleep stage. Our data suggest a transition from a globally integrated functional brain network in wakefulness to a disintegrated network consisting of local submodules in slow-wave sleep, in which frontoparietal inter-modular nodes may play a crucial role, possibly in combination with the thalamus.
topic Sleep
EEG
fMRI
functional connectivity
frontoparietal
hierarchy
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fneur.2012.00080/full
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