Background: Sleep spindles are ∼1-second bursts of 10–15 Hz activity, occurring during normal stage 2 sleep. In animals, sleep spindles can be synchronous across multiple cortical and thalamic locations, suggesting a distributed stable phase-locked generating system. The high synchrony of spindles across scalp EEG sites suggests that this may also be true in humans. However, prior MEG studies suggest multiple and varying generators. Methodology/Principal Findings: We recorded 306 channels of MEG simultaneously with 60 channels of EEG during naturally occurring spindles of stage 2 sleep in 7 healthy subjects. High-resolution structural MRI was obtained in each subject, to define the shells for a boundary element forward solution and to recon...
Sleep spindles are bursts of 11–15 Hz that occur during non-rapid eye movement sleep. Spindles are h...
Objective: First, to determine the distribution of the estimated sources of sleep spindles, and alph...
To identify and compare cortical source generators of slow and fast sleep spindles in healthy subjec...
BackgroundSleep spindles are approximately 1-second bursts of 10-15 Hz activity, occurring during no...
Sleep spindles are similar to 1-second bursts of 10-15 Hz activity, occurring during normal stage 2 ...
Dehghani N, Cash SS, Rossetti AO, Chen CC, Halgren E. Magnetoencephalography demonstrates multiple a...
Sleep spindles are approximately 1 s bursts of 10-16 Hz activity that occur during stage 2 sleep. Sp...
Sleep spindles are a cardinal feature in human NREM sleep and may be important for memory consolidat...
cortical generators of MEG and EEG during human sleep spindles suggested by distributed source model...
In humans, the knowledge of intracranial correlates of spindles is mainly gathered from noninvasive ...
AbstractIn humans, the knowledge of intracranial correlates of spindles is mainly gathered from noni...
Sleep spindles are a cardinal feature in human NREM sleep and may be important for memory consolidat...
Sleep is generally considered to be a state of large-scale synchrony across thalamus and neocortex; ...
Although they form a unitary phenomenon, the relationship between extracranial M/EEG and transmembra...
The existence of two different types of sleep spindles (slow and fast) is well-established, accordin...
Sleep spindles are bursts of 11–15 Hz that occur during non-rapid eye movement sleep. Spindles are h...
Objective: First, to determine the distribution of the estimated sources of sleep spindles, and alph...
To identify and compare cortical source generators of slow and fast sleep spindles in healthy subjec...
BackgroundSleep spindles are approximately 1-second bursts of 10-15 Hz activity, occurring during no...
Sleep spindles are similar to 1-second bursts of 10-15 Hz activity, occurring during normal stage 2 ...
Dehghani N, Cash SS, Rossetti AO, Chen CC, Halgren E. Magnetoencephalography demonstrates multiple a...
Sleep spindles are approximately 1 s bursts of 10-16 Hz activity that occur during stage 2 sleep. Sp...
Sleep spindles are a cardinal feature in human NREM sleep and may be important for memory consolidat...
cortical generators of MEG and EEG during human sleep spindles suggested by distributed source model...
In humans, the knowledge of intracranial correlates of spindles is mainly gathered from noninvasive ...
AbstractIn humans, the knowledge of intracranial correlates of spindles is mainly gathered from noni...
Sleep spindles are a cardinal feature in human NREM sleep and may be important for memory consolidat...
Sleep is generally considered to be a state of large-scale synchrony across thalamus and neocortex; ...
Although they form a unitary phenomenon, the relationship between extracranial M/EEG and transmembra...
The existence of two different types of sleep spindles (slow and fast) is well-established, accordin...
Sleep spindles are bursts of 11–15 Hz that occur during non-rapid eye movement sleep. Spindles are h...
Objective: First, to determine the distribution of the estimated sources of sleep spindles, and alph...
To identify and compare cortical source generators of slow and fast sleep spindles in healthy subjec...