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Journal ArticleDOI

Sleep spindles and rapid eye movement sleep as predictors of next morning cognitive performance in healthy middle-aged and older participants.

TLDR
Higher spindle density predicted better performance on verbal learning, visual attention and verbal fluency, whereas spindle frequency and slow wave density or slope predicted fewer cognitive performance variables.
Abstract
Spindles and slow waves are hallmarks of non-rapid eye movement sleep. Both these oscillations are markers of neuronal plasticity, and play a role in memory and cognition. Normal ageing is associated with spindle and slow wave decline and cognitive changes. The present study aimed to assess whether spindle and slow wave characteristics during a baseline night predict cognitive performance in healthy older adults the next morning. Specifically, we examined performance on tasks measuring selective and sustained visual attention, declarative verbal memory, working memory and verbal fluency. Fifty-eight healthy middle-aged and older adults (aged 50-91years) without sleep disorders underwent baseline polysomnographic sleep recording followed by neuropsychological assessment the next morning. Spindles and slow waves were detected automatically on artefact-free non-rapid eye movement sleep electroencephalogram. All-night stage N2 spindle density (no./min) and mean frequency (Hz) and all-night non-rapid eye movement sleep slow wave density (no./min) and mean slope (V/s) were analysed. Pearson's correlations were performed between spindles, slow waves, polysomnography and cognitive performance. Higher spindle density predicted better performance on verbal learning, visual attention and verbal fluency, whereas spindle frequency and slow wave density or slope predicted fewer cognitive performance variables. In addition, rapid eye movement sleep duration was associated with better verbal learning potential. These results suggest that spindle density is a marker of cognitive functioning in older adults and may reflect neuroanatomic integrity. Rapid eye movement sleep may be a marker of age-related changes in acetylcholine transmission, which plays a role in new information encoding.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Sleep, cognition, and normal aging: integrating a half century of multidisciplinary research.

TL;DR: The literature is interpreted as suggesting that maintaining good sleep quality, at least in young adulthood and middle age, promotes better cognitive functioning and serves to protect against age-related cognitive declines.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sleep Spindles: Mechanisms and Functions.

TL;DR: Their fine spatiotemporal organization reflects NREMS as a physiological state coordinated over brain and body and may indicate, if not anticipate and ultimately differentiate, pathologies in sleep and neurodevelopmental, -degenerative and -psychiatric conditions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Characterizing sleep spindles in 11,630 individuals from the National Sleep Research Resource.

TL;DR: This work characterize spindles in 11,630 individuals aged 4 to 97 years, as a prelude to future genetic studies and identifies previously unappreciated correlates of spindle activity, including confounding by body mass index mediated by cardiac interference in the EEG.
Journal ArticleDOI

Self-reported sleep duration and cognitive performance in older adults: a systematic review and meta-analysis.

TL;DR: Findings establish self-reported extreme sleep duration as a risk factor for cognitive aging as well as cross-sectional and prospective cohort studies revealed the significant long-term impact of short and long sleep on multiple-domain performance only.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sleep spindles in Parkinson's disease may predict the development of dementia.

TL;DR: Sleep spindle alterations are associated with later development of dementia in Parkinson's disease, and thus may serve as an additional marker of cognitive decline in these patients.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

N-back working memory paradigm: A meta-analysis of normative functional neuroimaging studies

TL;DR: The authors conducted a quantitative meta-analysis of 668 sets of activation coordinates in Talairach space reported in 24 primary studies of n-back task variants manipulating process (location vs. identity monitoring) and content (verbal or nonverbal) of working memory.
Journal ArticleDOI

Grouping of brain rhythms in corticothalamic systems

TL;DR: The experimental evidence for unified oscillations derived from simultaneous intracellular recordings of cortical and thalamic neurons in vivo, while recent studies in humans using global methods provided congruent results of grouping different types of slow and fast oscillatory activities.
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