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Sleep spindle‐related activity in the human EEG and its relation to general cognitive and learning abilities
Author(s) -
Schabus M.,
Hödlmoser K.,
Gruber G.,
Sauter C.,
Anderer P.,
Klösch G.,
Parapatics S.,
Saletu B.,
Klimesch W.,
Zeitlhofer J.
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
european journal of neuroscience
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.346
H-Index - 206
eISSN - 1460-9568
pISSN - 0953-816X
DOI - 10.1111/j.1460-9568.2006.04694.x
Subject(s) - psychology , sleep spindle , cognition , association (psychology) , sleep (system call) , cognitive psychology , electroencephalography , wechsler adult intelligence scale , working memory , neuroscience , audiology , raven's progressive matrices , sleep stages , polysomnography , developmental psychology , non rapid eye movement sleep , medicine , computer science , psychotherapist , operating system
Abstract Stage 2 sleep spindles have been previously viewed as useful markers for the development and integrity of the CNS and were more currently linked to ‘offline re‐processing’ of implicit as well as explicit memory traces. Additionally, it had been discussed if spindles might be related to a more general learning or cognitive ability. In the present multicentre study we examined the relationship of automatically detected slow (< 13 Hz) and fast (> 13 Hz) stage 2 sleep spindles with: (i) the Raven's Advanced Progressive Matrices (testing ‘general cognitive ability’); as well as (ii) the Wechsler Memory scale‐revised (evaluating memory in various subdomains). Forty‐eight healthy subjects slept three times (separated by 1 week) for a whole night in a sleep laboratory with complete polysomnographic montage. Whereas the first night only served adaptation and screening purposes, the two remaining nights were preceded either by an implicit mirror‐tracing or an explicit word‐pair association learning or (corresponding) control task. Robust relationships of slow and fast sleep spindles with both cognitive as well as memory abilities were found irrespectively of whether learning occurred before sleep. Based on the present findings we suggest that besides being involved in shaping neuronal networks after learning, sleep spindles do reflect important aspects of efficient cortical‐subcortical connectivity, and are thereby linked to cognitive‐ and memory‐related abilities alike.