Saturday, August 16, 2025

When the human brain awakens after sleep

Amazing stuff!

"The process of transitioning from sleep to wakefulness (awakening) in humans has been shown to occur over several minutes. However, how the awakening process occurs at the level of brain activity remains to be fully elucidated.
Stephan et al. analyzed more than 1000 awakening events in humans using high-density electroencephalography (EEG) and revealed distinct spatiotemporal EEG signatures associated with awakening from non–rapid eye movement (non-REM) and REM sleep.
When present before waking up from non-REM sleep, this distinct EEG pattern was associated with feeling less sleepy. These results might have implications for sleep disorders associated with abnormal sleepiness during wakefulness."

From the highlights and abstract:
"Highlights
• High-density EEG reveals consistent cortical activation patterns upon awakening
• High-frequency arousal changes follow a front-to-back gradient across sleep stages
• Low-frequency arousal changes in NREM sleep start in a posterior-medial hotspot
• Different slow wave types show opposite relation to sleepiness upon awakening

Summary
How does the brain awaken from sleep? Several studies have suggested that the awakening process occurs asynchronously across brain regions, but the precise nature of these changes and how they are reflected in human electroencephalography (EEG) remains unknown.
Here, we recorded 1,073 awakenings and arousals with high-density EEG and mapped brain activity at a second-to-second timescale around movement onset using source modeling.
We found that cortical activity upon awakening progressed along highly consistent spatial and frequency gradients.
In awakenings and arousals from non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep, transient increases in low-frequency power preceded increases in high-frequency power by a few seconds,
whereas awakenings from REM sleep were mainly characterized by increases in high-frequency power.
Regardless of sleep stage, high-frequency changes were first seen in frontal and last in occipital and inferior-temporal cortical areas, whereas low-frequency changes in NREM sleep started in a centro-parietal “hotspot,” progressed frontally, and reached occipital and inferior-temporal regions last.
Finally, the presence of these spatio-temporal arousal patterns during sleep, before participants were awakened by sounds, was followed by lower sleepiness ratings upon awakening.
These results indicate a consistent spatio-temporal EEG signature of the awakening process that likely reflects the structural organization of arousal systems.
Importantly, a transient increase in slow EEG frequencies, which are normally associated with sleep, is inherent to the arousal process and functionally correlates with feeling more awake when awakening from NREM sleep.
These findings have important implications for the interpretation of arousal signals and the detection of incomplete awakenings in sleep disorders."

In Other Journals | Science



Graphical abstract


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