作者
Adrien Peyrache, Julie Seibt
发表日期
2020/5/25
来源
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B
卷号
375
期号
1799
页码范围
20190230
出版商
The Royal Society
简介
Spindles are ubiquitous oscillations during non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep. A growing body of evidence points to a possible link with learning and memory, and the underlying mechanisms are now starting to be unveiled. Specifically, spindles are associated with increased dendritic activity and high intracellular calcium levels, a situation favourable to plasticity, as well as with control of spiking output by feed-forward inhibition. During spindles, thalamocortical networks become unresponsive to inputs, thus potentially preventing interference between memory-related internal information processing and extrinsic signals. At the system level, spindles are co-modulated with other major NREM oscillations, including hippocampal sharp wave-ripples (SWRs) and neocortical slow waves, both previously shown to be associated with learning and memory. The sequential occurrence of reactivation at the time of SWRs …
引用总数
20202021202220232024415242214
学术搜索中的文章
A Peyrache, J Seibt - Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B, 2020