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Circadian Preference Modulates the Neural Substrate of Conflict Processing across the Day

Human morning and evening chronotypes differ in their preferred timing for sleep and wakefulness, as well as in optimal daytime periods to cope with cognitive challenges. Recent evidence suggests that these preferences are not a simple by-product of socio-professional timing constraints, but can be...

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Autores principales: Schmidt, Christina, Peigneux, Philippe, Leclercq, Yves, Sterpenich, Virginie, Vandewalle, Gilles, Phillips, Christophe, Berthomier, Pierre, Berthomier, Christian, Tinguely, Gilberte, Gais, Steffen, Schabus, Manuel, Desseilles, Martin, Dang-Vu, Thanh, Salmon, Eric, Degueldre, Christian, Balteau, Evelyne, Luxen, André, Cajochen, Christian, Maquet, Pierre, Collette, Fabienne
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3251569/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22238632
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0029658
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author Schmidt, Christina
Peigneux, Philippe
Leclercq, Yves
Sterpenich, Virginie
Vandewalle, Gilles
Phillips, Christophe
Berthomier, Pierre
Berthomier, Christian
Tinguely, Gilberte
Gais, Steffen
Schabus, Manuel
Desseilles, Martin
Dang-Vu, Thanh
Salmon, Eric
Degueldre, Christian
Balteau, Evelyne
Luxen, André
Cajochen, Christian
Maquet, Pierre
Collette, Fabienne
author_facet Schmidt, Christina
Peigneux, Philippe
Leclercq, Yves
Sterpenich, Virginie
Vandewalle, Gilles
Phillips, Christophe
Berthomier, Pierre
Berthomier, Christian
Tinguely, Gilberte
Gais, Steffen
Schabus, Manuel
Desseilles, Martin
Dang-Vu, Thanh
Salmon, Eric
Degueldre, Christian
Balteau, Evelyne
Luxen, André
Cajochen, Christian
Maquet, Pierre
Collette, Fabienne
author_sort Schmidt, Christina
collection PubMed
description Human morning and evening chronotypes differ in their preferred timing for sleep and wakefulness, as well as in optimal daytime periods to cope with cognitive challenges. Recent evidence suggests that these preferences are not a simple by-product of socio-professional timing constraints, but can be driven by inter-individual differences in the expression of circadian and homeostatic sleep-wake promoting signals. Chronotypes thus constitute a unique tool to access the interplay between those processes under normally entrained day-night conditions, and to investigate how they impinge onto higher cognitive control processes. Using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), we assessed the influence of chronotype and time-of-day on conflict processing-related cerebral activity throughout a normal waking day. Sixteen morning and 15 evening types were recorded at two individually adapted time points (1.5 versus 10.5 hours spent awake) while performing the Stroop paradigm. Results show that interference-related hemodynamic responses are maintained or even increased in evening types from the subjective morning to the subjective evening in a set of brain areas playing a pivotal role in successful inhibitory functioning, whereas they decreased in morning types under the same conditions. Furthermore, during the evening hours, activity in a posterior hypothalamic region putatively involved in sleep-wake regulation correlated in a chronotype-specific manner with slow wave activity at the beginning of the night, an index of accumulated homeostatic sleep pressure. These results shed light into the cerebral mechanisms underlying inter-individual differences of higher-order cognitive state maintenance under normally entrained day-night conditions.
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spelling pubmed-32515692012-01-11 Circadian Preference Modulates the Neural Substrate of Conflict Processing across the Day Schmidt, Christina Peigneux, Philippe Leclercq, Yves Sterpenich, Virginie Vandewalle, Gilles Phillips, Christophe Berthomier, Pierre Berthomier, Christian Tinguely, Gilberte Gais, Steffen Schabus, Manuel Desseilles, Martin Dang-Vu, Thanh Salmon, Eric Degueldre, Christian Balteau, Evelyne Luxen, André Cajochen, Christian Maquet, Pierre Collette, Fabienne PLoS One Research Article Human morning and evening chronotypes differ in their preferred timing for sleep and wakefulness, as well as in optimal daytime periods to cope with cognitive challenges. Recent evidence suggests that these preferences are not a simple by-product of socio-professional timing constraints, but can be driven by inter-individual differences in the expression of circadian and homeostatic sleep-wake promoting signals. Chronotypes thus constitute a unique tool to access the interplay between those processes under normally entrained day-night conditions, and to investigate how they impinge onto higher cognitive control processes. Using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), we assessed the influence of chronotype and time-of-day on conflict processing-related cerebral activity throughout a normal waking day. Sixteen morning and 15 evening types were recorded at two individually adapted time points (1.5 versus 10.5 hours spent awake) while performing the Stroop paradigm. Results show that interference-related hemodynamic responses are maintained or even increased in evening types from the subjective morning to the subjective evening in a set of brain areas playing a pivotal role in successful inhibitory functioning, whereas they decreased in morning types under the same conditions. Furthermore, during the evening hours, activity in a posterior hypothalamic region putatively involved in sleep-wake regulation correlated in a chronotype-specific manner with slow wave activity at the beginning of the night, an index of accumulated homeostatic sleep pressure. These results shed light into the cerebral mechanisms underlying inter-individual differences of higher-order cognitive state maintenance under normally entrained day-night conditions. Public Library of Science 2012-01-04 /pmc/articles/PMC3251569/ /pubmed/22238632 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0029658 Text en Schmidt et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Schmidt, Christina
Peigneux, Philippe
Leclercq, Yves
Sterpenich, Virginie
Vandewalle, Gilles
Phillips, Christophe
Berthomier, Pierre
Berthomier, Christian
Tinguely, Gilberte
Gais, Steffen
Schabus, Manuel
Desseilles, Martin
Dang-Vu, Thanh
Salmon, Eric
Degueldre, Christian
Balteau, Evelyne
Luxen, André
Cajochen, Christian
Maquet, Pierre
Collette, Fabienne
Circadian Preference Modulates the Neural Substrate of Conflict Processing across the Day
title Circadian Preference Modulates the Neural Substrate of Conflict Processing across the Day
title_full Circadian Preference Modulates the Neural Substrate of Conflict Processing across the Day
title_fullStr Circadian Preference Modulates the Neural Substrate of Conflict Processing across the Day
title_full_unstemmed Circadian Preference Modulates the Neural Substrate of Conflict Processing across the Day
title_short Circadian Preference Modulates the Neural Substrate of Conflict Processing across the Day
title_sort circadian preference modulates the neural substrate of conflict processing across the day
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3251569/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22238632
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0029658
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