Evidence of P3a During Sleep, a Process Associated With Intrusions Into Consciousness in the Waking State

The present study examines processes associated with intrusions into consciousness during an unconscious state, natural sleep. The definition of sleep is still much debated. Almost all researchers agree that sleep onset represents a gradual loss of consciousness of the external environment. For slee...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Paniz Tavakoli, Allyson Dale, Addo Boafo, Kenneth Campbell
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2019-01-01
Series:Frontiers in Neuroscience
Subjects:
P3a
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fnins.2018.01028/full
id doaj-495bde4ee56f42d58ca154cfd55d0189
record_format Article
spelling doaj-495bde4ee56f42d58ca154cfd55d01892020-11-25T00:56:44ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Neuroscience1662-453X2019-01-011210.3389/fnins.2018.01028428960Evidence of P3a During Sleep, a Process Associated With Intrusions Into Consciousness in the Waking StatePaniz Tavakoli0Allyson Dale1Addo Boafo2Addo Boafo3Kenneth Campbell4Children’s Hospital of Eastern Ontario, Ottawa, ON, CanadaSchool of Psychology, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, ON, CanadaChildren’s Hospital of Eastern Ontario, Ottawa, ON, CanadaDepartment of Psychiatry, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, ON, CanadaSchool of Psychology, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, ON, CanadaThe present study examines processes associated with intrusions into consciousness during an unconscious state, natural sleep. The definition of sleep is still much debated. Almost all researchers agree that sleep onset represents a gradual loss of consciousness of the external environment. For sleep to be beneficial, it needs to remain as undisturbed as possible. Nevertheless, unlike other unconsciousness states, sleep is reversible. For purposes of survival, it is critical that the sleeper be able to “detect” and perhaps become conscious of highly relevant biological or personal information. Therefore, even in sleep, the brain must decide whether a new incoming stimulus is relevant and if so, may require an arousal to wakefulness, or whether it is irrelevant and can be gated to prevent disruption of sleep. Event-related potentials (ERPs) were used to measure the extent processing of auditory stimuli some of which elicited an ERP component, the P3a, in the waking state. The P3a is associated with processes resulting in the interruption of frontal central executive, leading to conscious awareness. Very little research has focused on the occurrence of the P3a during sleep. A multi-feature paradigm was used to examine the processing of a frequently occurring “standard” stimulus and six rarely occurring different “deviant” stimuli during wakefulness, NREM, and REM sleep. A P3a was elicited by novel environmental sounds and white noise bursts in the waking state, replicating previous studies. Other deviant stimuli (changes in pitch, intensity, duration) failed to do so. The ERPs indicated that processing of the stimuli that did not elicit a P3a in wakefulness were much inhibited during both NREM and REM sleep. Surprisingly, those deviants that did elicit a P3a in wakefulness continued to do so in stage N2 and REM sleep. The subject did not, however, awaken. These results suggest processes leading to consciousness in wakefulness may still remain active during sleep possibly allowing subjects to act on potentially highly relevant input. This may also explain how sleep can be reversed if the stimulus input is sufficiently critical.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fnins.2018.01028/fullconscious awarenesssleepgatingevent-related potentialsP3amulti-feature paradigm
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Paniz Tavakoli
Allyson Dale
Addo Boafo
Addo Boafo
Kenneth Campbell
spellingShingle Paniz Tavakoli
Allyson Dale
Addo Boafo
Addo Boafo
Kenneth Campbell
Evidence of P3a During Sleep, a Process Associated With Intrusions Into Consciousness in the Waking State
Frontiers in Neuroscience
conscious awareness
sleep
gating
event-related potentials
P3a
multi-feature paradigm
author_facet Paniz Tavakoli
Allyson Dale
Addo Boafo
Addo Boafo
Kenneth Campbell
author_sort Paniz Tavakoli
title Evidence of P3a During Sleep, a Process Associated With Intrusions Into Consciousness in the Waking State
title_short Evidence of P3a During Sleep, a Process Associated With Intrusions Into Consciousness in the Waking State
title_full Evidence of P3a During Sleep, a Process Associated With Intrusions Into Consciousness in the Waking State
title_fullStr Evidence of P3a During Sleep, a Process Associated With Intrusions Into Consciousness in the Waking State
title_full_unstemmed Evidence of P3a During Sleep, a Process Associated With Intrusions Into Consciousness in the Waking State
title_sort evidence of p3a during sleep, a process associated with intrusions into consciousness in the waking state
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Neuroscience
issn 1662-453X
publishDate 2019-01-01
description The present study examines processes associated with intrusions into consciousness during an unconscious state, natural sleep. The definition of sleep is still much debated. Almost all researchers agree that sleep onset represents a gradual loss of consciousness of the external environment. For sleep to be beneficial, it needs to remain as undisturbed as possible. Nevertheless, unlike other unconsciousness states, sleep is reversible. For purposes of survival, it is critical that the sleeper be able to “detect” and perhaps become conscious of highly relevant biological or personal information. Therefore, even in sleep, the brain must decide whether a new incoming stimulus is relevant and if so, may require an arousal to wakefulness, or whether it is irrelevant and can be gated to prevent disruption of sleep. Event-related potentials (ERPs) were used to measure the extent processing of auditory stimuli some of which elicited an ERP component, the P3a, in the waking state. The P3a is associated with processes resulting in the interruption of frontal central executive, leading to conscious awareness. Very little research has focused on the occurrence of the P3a during sleep. A multi-feature paradigm was used to examine the processing of a frequently occurring “standard” stimulus and six rarely occurring different “deviant” stimuli during wakefulness, NREM, and REM sleep. A P3a was elicited by novel environmental sounds and white noise bursts in the waking state, replicating previous studies. Other deviant stimuli (changes in pitch, intensity, duration) failed to do so. The ERPs indicated that processing of the stimuli that did not elicit a P3a in wakefulness were much inhibited during both NREM and REM sleep. Surprisingly, those deviants that did elicit a P3a in wakefulness continued to do so in stage N2 and REM sleep. The subject did not, however, awaken. These results suggest processes leading to consciousness in wakefulness may still remain active during sleep possibly allowing subjects to act on potentially highly relevant input. This may also explain how sleep can be reversed if the stimulus input is sufficiently critical.
topic conscious awareness
sleep
gating
event-related potentials
P3a
multi-feature paradigm
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fnins.2018.01028/full
work_keys_str_mv AT paniztavakoli evidenceofp3aduringsleepaprocessassociatedwithintrusionsintoconsciousnessinthewakingstate
AT allysondale evidenceofp3aduringsleepaprocessassociatedwithintrusionsintoconsciousnessinthewakingstate
AT addoboafo evidenceofp3aduringsleepaprocessassociatedwithintrusionsintoconsciousnessinthewakingstate
AT addoboafo evidenceofp3aduringsleepaprocessassociatedwithintrusionsintoconsciousnessinthewakingstate
AT kennethcampbell evidenceofp3aduringsleepaprocessassociatedwithintrusionsintoconsciousnessinthewakingstate
_version_ 1725225777265377280