Disruption of hierarchical predictive coding during sleep.

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A

Cognitive Neuroimaging Unit, Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale, U992, F-91191 Gif/Yvette, France; NeuroSpin Center, Institute of BioImaging, Commissariat à l'Energie Atomique, F-91191 Gif/Yvette, France; Department of Life Sciences, Université Paris 11, 91400 Orsay, France; and Chair of Experimental Cognitive Psychology, Collège de France, F-75005 Paris, France

Published: March 2015

AI Article Synopsis

  • The brain uses predictive coding to recognize patterns in sounds and identify unexpected changes, but it's unclear if this happens consciously or automatically during sleep.
  • The study recorded brain activity in people listening to sounds while awake and asleep to investigate how auditory novelty detection functions in different sleep stages.
  • Findings show that while basic auditory processing continues during sleep, the higher-level cognitive response to longer-term patterns fades away, indicating that sleep disrupts the brain's ability to predict and respond to complex auditory changes.

Article Abstract

When presented with an auditory sequence, the brain acts as a predictive-coding device that extracts regularities in the transition probabilities between sounds and detects unexpected deviations from these regularities. Does such prediction require conscious vigilance, or does it continue to unfold automatically in the sleeping brain? The mismatch negativity and P300 components of the auditory event-related potential, reflecting two steps of auditory novelty detection, have been inconsistently observed in the various sleep stages. To clarify whether these steps remain during sleep, we recorded simultaneous electroencephalographic and magnetoencephalographic signals during wakefulness and during sleep in normal subjects listening to a hierarchical auditory paradigm including short-term (local) and long-term (global) regularities. The global response, reflected in the P300, vanished during sleep, in line with the hypothesis that it is a correlate of high-level conscious error detection. The local mismatch response remained across all sleep stages (N1, N2, and REM sleep), but with an incomplete structure; compared with wakefulness, a specific peak reflecting prediction error vanished during sleep. Those results indicate that sleep leaves initial auditory processing and passive sensory response adaptation intact, but specifically disrupts both short-term and long-term auditory predictive coding.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4371991PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1501026112DOI Listing

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