Functional connectivity drifts during sleep as a marker of fluctuations in the level of consciousness
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During the wake-sleep cycle, consciousness waxes and wanes, and this is thought to be reflected in varying levels of integration between brain areas. Recent studies challenged the notion that consciousness is homogeneously present or absent in a brain state, as exemplified by conscious reports found in otherwise unconscious Non-REM sleep. We tested if functional connectivity between neurons varies within brain states in a way compatible with a fluctuating level of consciousness. We examined directed functional connectivity between neurons across the wake-sleep cycle in rats, at a scale of a few seconds. We analyzed patterns of functional connectivity to determine if Non-REM sleep contains epochs in which inter-areal integration is comparable to that observed in wakefulness and REM sleep, and vice versa. This study will potentially reveal if circuit-level connectivity patterns are observed during sleep stages, in line with the presence of an alternation between levels of consciousness not only between but also within brain states.