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Arthur Le Coz

Institut du Cerveau - Paris Brain Institute - ICM, Inserm, CNRS, APHP, Hôpital de la Pitié Salpêtrière, Sorbonne Université, Paris, France.

3 papers in the library · 10 citations · publishing 2025-2026

Papers

Behavioral, experiential, and physiological signatures of mind blanking.

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America December 30, 2025 Esteban Munoz-Musat, Arthur Le Coz, Andrew W Corcoran et al. 5 citations

Mind blanking—a state of apparent mental emptiness—produces distinct brain signatures that separate it from mind wandering and focused attention. In 62 participants performing a sustained attention task, mind blanking was associated with behavioral lapses, reduced fast brain oscillations and complexity over posterior electrodes, and decreased long-range connectivity compared to both mind wandering and on-task states. Event-related potentials showed disrupted visual processing beginning 200 milliseconds after a stimulus, suggesting a breakdown in conscious access to sensory information. Brain activity patterns predicted mental states on individual trials, revealing dynamics that subjective reports alone miss. These findings indicate that being awake does not guarantee consciousness of something; mind blanking reflects genuine gaps in the stream of thought, arising from disruptions in generating or accessing thought content.

Talking to sleepwalkers? Response to communication efforts in disorders of arousals.

Sleep February 10, 2025 Yannis Idir, Régis Lopez, Amélie Barbier et al. 5 citations

Disorders of arousal (DoA) episodes, such as sleepwalking, are not a uniform state but involve varying levels of consciousness and responsiveness. In a retrospective questionnaire, 81% of 61 adult patients reported occasional conversations during episodes. Auditory stimulation during N3 sleep triggered episodes in only 7 of 157 trials, and only one patient indirectly responded to verbal prompts. Analysis of 364 home video-recorded episodes from 19 patients found 37 instances of discussion with a bed partner. Patients' ongoing mental content influenced their responses and perception of the outside world. These findings highlight limitations in current diagnostic criteria for DoA.

Dream-like mental states can occur during wakefulness.

Cell reports April 7, 2026 Nicolas Decat, Arthur Le Coz, Jade Sénéchal et al.

Mental experiences during wakefulness and sleep are not as distinct as commonly thought. Analyzing electroencephalography (EEG) from 92 participants during daytime rest, researchers collected 375 reports of mental content scored on bizarreness, fluidity, spontaneity, and wake perception. Clustering these reports revealed four distinct types of mental states. Crucially, all four types occurred across wakefulness, N1 sleep, and N2 sleep. EEG measures of spectral power, complexity, and connectivity differentiated these mental states independently of whether participants were awake or asleep. The findings indicate that the waking and sleeping brain can produce the same mental state, and that fine-grained brain dynamics shape the content of mental experiences.