AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates sleep talking (ST) as a distinct phenomenon, analyzing its psycholinguistic features and corresponding EEG activity to find similarities with awake language production.
  • The research involved 13 participants and compared EEG data from verbal ST and nonverbal vocalizations during NREM sleep, assessing sleep structure and brain activity patterns.
  • Findings indicate that verbal ST shares neural mechanisms with conscious language processing, suggesting a connection between sleep-related vocalizations and linguistic planning while awake.

Article Abstract

Study Objectives: Sleep talking (ST) has been rarely studied as an isolated phenomenon. Late investigations over the psycholinguistic features of vocal production in ST pointed to coherence with wake language formal features. Therefore, we investigated the EEG correlates of Verbal ST as the overt manifestation of sleep-related language processing, with the hypothesis of shared electrophysiological correlates with wake language production.

Methods: From a sample of 155 Highly frequent STs, we recorded 13 participants (age range 19-30 years, mean age 24.6 ± 3.3; 7F) via vPSG for at least two consecutive nights, and a total of 28 nights. We first investigated the sleep macrostructure of STs compared to 13 age and gender-matched subjects. We then compared the EEG signal before 21 Verbal STs versus 21 Nonverbal STs (moaning, laughing, crying, etc.) in six STs reporting both vocalization types in Stage 2 NREM sleep.

Results: The 2 × 2 mixed analysis of variance Group × Night interaction showed no statistically significant effect for macrostructural variables, but significant main effects for Group with lower REM (%), total sleep time, total bedtime, sleep efficiency index, and greater NREM (%) for STs compared to controls. EEG statistical comparisons (paired-samples Student's t-test) showed a decrement in power spectra for Verbal STs versus Nonverbal STs within the theta and alpha EEG bands, strongly lateralized to the left hemisphere and localized on centro-parietal-occipitals channels. A single left parietal channel (P7) held significance after Bonferroni correction.

Conclusions: Our results suggest shared neural mechanisms between Verbal ST and language processing during wakefulness and a possible functional overlapping with linguistic planning in wakefulness.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/sleep/zsab284DOI Listing

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