首页> 外文期刊>Journal of Clinical Neurophysiology >Mutual information analysis of EEG signals indicates age-related changes in cortical interdependence during sleep in middle-aged versus elderly women.
【24h】

Mutual information analysis of EEG signals indicates age-related changes in cortical interdependence during sleep in middle-aged versus elderly women.

机译:脑电信号的相互信息分析表明,中年妇女与老年妇女在睡眠期间皮质相互依赖性的年龄相关变化。

获取原文
获取原文并翻译 | 示例
           

摘要

Elderly subjects exhibit declining sleep efficiency parameters with longer time spent awake at night and greater sleep fragmentation. In this article, we report on the changes in cortical interdependence during sleep stages between 15 middle-aged (range: 42-50 years) and 15 elderly (range: 71-86 years) women subjects. Cortical interdependence assessed from EEG signals typically exhibits increasing levels of correlation because human subjects progress from wake to deeper stages of sleep. EEG signals acquired from previously existing polysomnogram datasets were subjected to mutual information analysis to detect changes in information transmission associated with change in sleep stage and to understand how age affects the interdependence values. We observed a significant reduction in the interdependence between central EEG signals of elderly subjects in nonrapid eye movement and rapid eye movement stage sleep in comparison with middle-aged subjects (age group effect: elderly versus middle aged P < 0.001, sleep stage effect: P < 0.001, interaction effect between age group and sleep stage: P = 0.007). A narrowband analysis revealed that the reduction in mutual information was present in delta, theta, and sigma frequencies. These findings suggest that the lowered cortical interdependence in sleep of elderly subjects may indicate independently evolving dynamic neural activities at multiple cortical sites. The loss of synchronization between neural activities during sleep in the elderly may make these women more susceptible to localized disturbances that could lead to frequent arousals.
机译:老年受试者的睡眠效率参数下降,夜间醒来的时间更长,睡眠破碎程度更大。在本文中,我们报告了15位中年(范围:42-50岁)和15位年长者(范围:71-86岁)女性受试者在睡眠阶段皮质相互依赖性的变化。根据EEG信号评估的皮质相互依赖性通常表现出越来越高的相关性,因为人类受试者从觉醒发展到更深的睡眠阶段。从先前存在的多导睡眠图数据集中获取的EEG信号经过相互信息分析,以检测与睡眠阶段变化相关的信息传递变化,并了解年龄如何影响相互依赖性值。我们观察到,与中年人相比,老年人在快速眼动和快速眼动阶段睡眠中的中央脑电信号之间的相互依赖性显着降低(年龄组影响:老年人与中年P <0.001,睡眠阶段影响:P <0.001,年龄组和睡眠阶段之间的相互作用:P = 0.007)。窄带分析显示,互信息的减少存在于δ,θ和sigma频率中。这些发现表明,老年受试者睡眠中皮质相互依赖性的降低可能表明在多个皮质部位独立发生动态神经活动。老年人睡眠期间神经活动之间失去同步性,可能会使这些妇女更容易受到局部性干扰的影响,从而可能导致频繁的唤醒。

著录项

相似文献

  • 外文文献
  • 中文文献
  • 专利
获取原文

客服邮箱:kefu@zhangqiaokeyan.com

京公网安备:11010802029741号 ICP备案号:京ICP备15016152号-6 六维联合信息科技 (北京) 有限公司©版权所有
  • 客服微信

  • 服务号