| Literature DB >> 28122495 |
Jue Huang1, Tilman Hensch2, Christine Ulke2,3, Christian Sander2,3, Janek Spada3, Philippe Jawinski2,3, Ulrich Hegerl2,3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Previous studies compared evoked potentials (EPs) between several sleep stages but only one uniform wake state. However, using electroencephalography (EEG), several arousal states can be distinguished before sleep onset. Recently, the Vigilance Algorithm Leipzig (VIGALL 2.0) has been developed, which automatically attributes one out of seven EEG-vigilance stages to each 1-s EEG segment, ranging from stage 0 (associated with cognitively active wakefulness), to stages A1, A2 and A3 (associated with relaxed wakefulness), to stages B1 and B2/3 (associated with drowsiness) up to stage C (indicating sleep onset). Applying VIGALL, we specified the effects of these finely differentiated EEG-vigilance stages (indicating arousal states) on EPs (P1, N1, P2, N300, MMN and P3) and behavioral performance. Subjects underwent an ignored and attended condition of a 2-h eyes-closed oddball-task. Final analysis included 43 subjects in the ignored and 51 subjects in the attended condition. First, the effect of brain arousal states on EPs and performance parameters were analyzed between EEG-vigilance stages A (i.e. A1, A2 and A3 combined), B1 and B2/3&C (i.e. B2/3 and C combined). Then, in a second step, the effects of the finely differentiated EEG-vigilance stages were further specified.Entities:
Keywords: Behavioral performance; Brain arousal; EEG-vigilance stage; Evoked potential; Oddball paradigm; VIGALL
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28122495 PMCID: PMC5267455 DOI: 10.1186/s12868-017-0340-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Neurosci ISSN: 1471-2202 Impact factor: 3.288
Assessment of brain arousal states by applying VIGALL 2.0
| VIGALL stages | Corresponding behavioral state | EEG-characteristics |
|---|---|---|
| 0 | Cognitively active wakefulness | Low amplitude, desynchronized non-alpha EEG without horizontal SEM |
| A1 | Occipital dominant alpha activity | |
| A2 | Relaxed wakefulness | Starting shifts of alpha to central and frontal cortical areas |
| A3 | Continued frontalization of alpha | |
| B1 | Drowsiness | Low amplitude, desynchronized EEG with horizontal SEM |
| B2/3 | Dominant delta- and theta-power | |
| C | Sleep onset | Occurrence of K-complex and sleep spindles |
SEM slow eye movements
Fig. 1Grand average waveforms (a) and mean amplitudes (b) for standard components in the ignored condition. The standard P1, N1, P2 and N300 are presented at Cz electrode in EEG-vigilance stages A, B1 and B2/3&C (N = 38). The significant results of multiple comparisons are marked with asterisk (*p < .05; **p < .01; ***p < .001; each p value is Bonferroni corrected). The corresponding effect sizes for Cohen’s dz are represented in parentheses
Fig. 2Grand average waveforms (a) and mean amplitudes (b) for standard components in the attended condition. The standard P1, N1, P2 and N300 are presented at Cz electrode in EEG-vigilance stages A, B1 and B2/3&C (N = 44). The significant results of multiple comparisons are marked with asterisk (*p < .05; **p < .01; ***p < .001; each p value is Bonferroni corrected). The corresponding effect sizes for Cohen’s dz are represented in parentheses
Fig. 3Behavioral performance concerning target stimuli in the attended condition. The averaged reaction time (RT), hit rate (HR), omission rate (OR) and false alarm rate (FAR) are shown in EEG-vigilance stages A, B1 and B2/3&C (N = 29). The significant results of multiple comparisons are signed with asterisk (*p < .05; **p < .01; ***p < .001; each p value is Bonferroni corrected). The corresponding effect sizes for Cohen’s dz are represented in parentheses