Today we have an extra seminar by Andy Ioannides from the Lab for Human
Brain Dynamics, Nicosia.
This seminar will be at noon, today, Wednesday the 15th in BO20 and the
title is
"Understanding sleep and its implications for specific health
conditions" the abstract is below
All welcome
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Andy Ioannides abstract is
"Some 20 years ago, Michel Jouvet, motivated by the early PET scanning
studies of the sleeping brain wrote in the concluding chapter of his
book The paradox of sleep - the story of dreaming “… the majority of
researchers are waiting with bated breath for the results of studies
combining PET scanning, ‘functional’ magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI),
magnetoencephalography and tomographic electroencephalography.” The
developments in the last two decades have fully vindicated this
statement. The talk will first review published work obtained from real
time tomographic analysis of the first whole night MEG recordings of
sleep that focused on changes in regional brain activations and
connectivity between areas related to eye movements and [1] and changes
in regional spectral content in each sleep stage and especially during
Rapid Eye Movement (REM) sleep [2]. The rest of the talk will present
unpublished results from further and more detailed analysis of the same
data. focusing on light sleep (NREM1 and NREM2) and discuss the new
findings in the context of current ideas about the role of K-complexes
and spindles in sleep maintenance and memory consolidation and how these
may relate to pathology. "
References:
[1] Ioannides, A.A., Corsi-Cabrera, M., Fenwick, P.B.C., del Rio
Portilla, Y., Laskaris, N.A., Khurshudyan, A., Theofilou, D., Shibata,
T., Uchida, S., Nakabayashi, T., Kostopoulos, G.K., 2004. MEG tomography
of human cortex and brainstem activity in waking and REM sleep saccades.
Cereb. Cortex 14, 56–72.
[2] Ioannides, A.A., Kostopoulos, G.K., Liu, L., Fenwick, P.B.C., 2009.
MEG identifies dorsal medial brain activations during sleep. Neuroimage
44, 455–468. doi:10.1016/j.neuroimage.2008.09.030
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Gary Green
York Neuroimaging Centre &
Centre for Hyperpolarisation in Magnetic Resonance
The Biocentre
York Science Park
Innovation Way
Heslington
York
YO10 5NY
tel +44 (0) 1904 435349
fax +44 (0) 1904 435356
mobile +44 (0) 788 191 3004
http://www.ynic.york.ac.uk
http://www.york.ac.uk/chym/
https://www.ynic.york.ac.uk/about-us/people/ggrg
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