Habitual night waking associates with dynamics of waking cortical theta power in infancy.
Louisa K GosséFrank WiesemannClare E ElwellEmily J H JonesPublished in: Developmental psychobiology (2022)
The implications of the substantial individual differences in infant sleep for early brain development remain unclear. Here, we examined whether night sleep quality relates to daytime brain activity, operationalized through measures of EEG theta power and its dynamic modulation, which have been previously linked to later cognitive development. For this longitudinal study, 76 typically developing infants were studied (age: 4-14 months, 166 individual study visits) over the course of 6 months with one, two, three, or four lab visits. Habitual sleep was measured with a 7-day sleep diary and actigraphy, and the Brief Infant Sleep Questionnaire. Twenty-channel EEG was recorded while infants watched multiple rounds of videos of women singing nursery rhymes; oscillatory power in the theta band was extracted. Key metrics were average theta across stimuli and the slope of change in theta within the first novel movie. Both objective and subjective sleep assessment methods showed a relationship between more night waking and higher overall theta power and reduced dynamic modulation of theta over the course of the novel video stimuli. These results may indicate altered learning and consolidation in infants with more disrupted night sleep, which may have implications for cognitive development.
Keyphrases
- sleep quality
- working memory
- transcranial magnetic stimulation
- depressive symptoms
- high frequency
- physical activity
- prefrontal cortex
- resting state
- functional connectivity
- type diabetes
- metabolic syndrome
- multiple sclerosis
- adipose tissue
- body mass index
- insulin resistance
- weight gain
- brain injury
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- cross sectional
- pregnancy outcomes
- cervical cancer screening