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Nightmares are a common sleep disorder, defined as highly disturbing mentation which usually awakens the individual from rapid eye movement (REM) sleep. While nightmares are mainly a REM sleep phenomenon, Picard-Deland et al., (2017) recently showed an association between nightmare recall and sleep spindles, which are a non-rapid eye movement (NREM) oscillatory feature. Their results pointed to fewer slow spindles and a higher oscillatory frequency for fast spindles among frequent nightmare recallers compared with controls. To test the suggestion that nightmares stem from changes to emotional neural circuits arising in early childhood (Nielsen, 2017), including early changes in sleep spindles (Scholle et al., 2007), we investigated if the spindle features of early-onset nightmare recallers (ie, recalling nightmares since childhood) (N = 22), differed from those of late-onset nightmare recallers (ie, since adolescence or adulthood) (N = 11), or from those of controls (N = 23). A retrospective analysis of the sleep spindles of 56 participants who had undergone a polysomnographically-recorded morning nap revealed that Early starters uniquely exhibited lower slow spindle densities in five of six derivations (all p < 0.045) and higher fast spindle frequencies in all six derivations (all p < 0.015). These results add precision to previously reported findings for Nightmare recallers: spindle differences are shown to hold only for Early starters. The lifelong occurrence of nightmares may be closely tied to disruptions in the normal development of spindle generation processes occurring early in development.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.sleep.2018.07.015 | DOI Listing |
Biol Psychiatry Cogn Neurosci Neuroimaging
September 2025
Division of Sleep Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA; Department of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA; Athinoula A. Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging, Charlestown, MA, USA; Department of Psychiatry, Mass General Brigham, Charlestown, MA, USA.
Background: Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) can be characterized as a disorder of fear learning and memory, in which there is a failure to retain memory for the extinction of conditioned fear. Sleep has been implicated in successful extinction retention. The coupling of sleep spindles to slow oscillations (SOs) during non-rapid eye movement sleep has been shown to broadly underpin sleep's beneficial effect on memory consolidation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFbioRxiv
August 2025
Department of Physiology and Pharmacology, State University of New York - Downstate Health Sciences University, Brooklyn, NY 11203, USA.
Despite recent advancements in mapping thalamic and cortical projections, the specific organization of intrathalamic and corticothalamic connectivity remains elusive. Current experimental approaches cannot definitively determine whether these connections are arranged in reciprocal (closed-) or non-reciprocal (open-loop) circuits. We developed a biophysically detailed multi-compartmental model of the mouse whisker pathway, built on anatomical and physiological data.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeuropsychologia
August 2025
Department of Psychology, University of York, UK.
The subordinate meaning of a homonym becomes temporarily more accessible after it is encountered, an effect termed word-meaning priming. Over the longer-term, word-meaning priming is better maintained across periods of sleep compared with wakefulness. This has been explained as sleep actively consolidating episodic memories related to recent linguistic events (Gaskell et al.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSleep Med
August 2025
Institute for Quantum Medical Science, National Institutes for Quantum Science and Technology, Chiba, Japan; Research Center for Child Mental Development, Chiba University, Chiba, Japan; United Graduate School of Child Development, The University of Osaka, Kanazawa University, Hamamatsu University S
Objective: This study investigates the impact of natural sleep quality on the subsequent day's resting-state functional MRI (rsfMRI) connectivity patterns.
Methods: Fourteen healthy female subjects participated in two sets of tests that included sleep assessments and MRI scans across two consecutive days. Sleep quality was objectively measured using a portable EEG monitor in the participant's home environment.
NPJ Sci Learn
August 2025
School of Psychology, Northwest Normal University, Lanzhou, China.
This study investigated the role of offline consolidation, specifically sleep, in transforming memories strengthened by retrieval practice into stable long-term representations. Forty-eight participants learned weakly associated Chinese word pairs via restudy(RS), retrieval practice with feedback (RP), and retrieval practice without feedback (NRP). After encoding, a nap group slept while a wake group remained awake.
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