Nature Communications
February 25, 2022
Minji Lee, Leandro Sanz, Alice Barra et al.
120 citations
A deep-learning-based explainable consciousness indicator (ECI) uses EEG responses to transcranial magnetic stimulation and resting-state EEG to separately quantify arousal and awareness. Tested during sleep (n=6), general anesthesia (n=16), and severe brain injury (n=34), ECI distinguishes states such as ketamine-induced anesthesia and rapid eye movement sleep, which combine low arousal with high awareness. Parietal brain regions are most relevant for these measurements. The indicator offers a way to disentangle the two components of consciousness across physiological, pharmacological, and pathological conditions.
Scientific Reports
March 26, 2019
Minji Lee, Benjamin Baird, Olivia Gosseries et al.
98 citations
During non-rapid eye movement sleep, conscious experiences are linked to reduced phase-locking at low frequencies (<4 Hz) and lower transitivity and clustering coefficient in delta and theta bands compared to unconsciousness, especially over parietal-occipital regions. No significant differences in Granger-causality patterns between frontal and parietal areas were found. These findings suggest that decreased local connectivity at low frequencies in posterior brain regions may indicate consciousness during sleep.
Scientific Reports
August 5, 2016
Jaakko O. Nieminen, Olivia Gosseries, Marcello Massimini et al.
60 citations
During non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep, the brain's response to transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) differs depending on whether the person is conscious (dreaming) or not. When subjects reported no conscious experience upon awakening, TMS evoked a larger negative deflection and a shorter phase-locked response compared to when they reported a dream. The amplitude of the negative deflection—a hallmark of neuronal bistability—was inversely correlated with the length of the dream report. These findings suggest that variations in the level of consciousness within the same physiological state are associated with changes in underlying cortical bistability.
Scientific Reports
November 5, 2018
Matthieu Darracq, Chadd M. Funk, Daniel Polyakov et al.
49 citations
Sleep and anesthesia alter conscious experience, which can be absent (unconsciousness) or take the form of dreaming where sensory stimuli are not incorporated (disconnected consciousness). Using transcranial magnetic stimulation-electroencephalography over parietal regions, evoked alpha power (8-12 Hz) decreased during disconnected consciousness in rapid eye movement sleep and ketamine anesthesia compared to wakefulness. In unconscious states of propofol anesthesia and non-rapid eye movement sleep, evoked low-gamma power (30-40 Hz) decreased compared to wakefulness or disconnected consciousness. These findings, confirmed with dream reports from serial awakenings, suggest suppression of evoked alpha activity may mark sensory disconnection.