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. 2006;138(1):351-6.
doi: 10.1016/j.neuroscience.2005.11.005. Epub 2006 Jan 4.

Trait-like individual differences in the human sleep electroencephalogram

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Trait-like individual differences in the human sleep electroencephalogram

J Buckelmüller et al. Neuroscience. 2006.

Abstract

We aimed to examine whether commonly observed individual differences in sleep architecture and the sleep electroencephalogram reflect individual traits, which are amenable to a genetic investigation of human sleep. We studied intra-individual stability and inter-individual variation in sleep and sleep electroencephalogram spectra across four baseline recordings of eight healthy young men. A similarity concept based on Euclidean distances between vectors was applied. Visually scored sleep variables served as feature vector components, along with electroencephalogram power spectra in non-rapid-eye-movement and rapid-eye-movement sleep. The distributions of similarity coefficients of feature vectors revealed a clear distinction between high within-subject similarity (i.e. stability), and low between-subject similarity (i.e. variation). Moreover, a cluster analysis based on electroencephalogram spectra in both non-rapid-eye-movement and rapid-eye-movement sleep segregated all four baseline nights of each individual into a distinct cluster. To investigate whether high and low sleep pressure affects the similarity coefficients, normalized non-rapid-eye-movement sleep electroencephalogram spectra of the first and second half of the recordings were compared. Because the electroencephalogram changes systematically in the course of the night, within-subject variation no longer differed from between-subject variation. In conclusion, our data provide evidence for trait-like characteristics in the sleep electroencephalogram. Further studies may help to identify distinct phenotypes to search for genes underlying functional aspects of undisturbed human sleep.

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