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The Interaction between Sleep and Development on Wake EEG Oscillations
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

The Interaction between Sleep and Development on Wake EEG Oscillations

Sophia Snipes, Valeria Jaramillo, Elena Krugliakova, Carina Volk, Melanie Furrer, Mirjam Studler, Monique LeBourgeois, Salome Kurth, Oskar G Jenni and Reto Huber
eNeuro, Vol.13(4), ENEURO0384252026
04/2026
PMID: 42045021

Abstract

Adolescent Adult Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity - physiopathology Brain - growth & development Brain - physiopathology Brain Waves - physiology Child Child, Preschool Electroencephalography Female Humans Male Sleep - physiology Wakefulness - physiology Young Adult
The amount of time previously spent awake or asleep strongly impacts the sleep electroencephalogram (EEG), especially slow waves during nonrapid-eye-movement (NREM) sleep. These effects on the sleep EEG meaningfully interact with age and to a lesser extent developmental disorders such as attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). We aimed to determine whether EEG oscillations during wakefulness were likewise affected by the interaction of sleep and development, using data collected from 163 participants aged 3-25 years old (62 female). We analyzed age- and sleep-dependent changes in two measures of oscillatory activity (amplitudes and density) and aperiodic activity (offsets and exponents). Finally, we compared wake EEG in children with ADHD (  = 58) to neurotypical controls, with habitual good sleep quality required for inclusion. We found that oscillation amplitudes exhibited the same dynamics as sleep slow waves: decreasing with age, decreasing after sleep, and the overnight decrease decreasing with age. Strikingly, wake oscillation densities in the alpha band decreased overnight in children but increased overnight in adolescents and adults. Aperiodic measures were affected by both sleep and age albeit with minimal interaction. No wake measure showed significant effects of ADHD, suggesting that previously reported differences in patients may reflect uncontrolled variability in sleep quality rather than disorder-specific effects. While these results do not disentangle homeostatic from circadian effects, they underscore the need to control for sleep/wake history and measurement scheduling in all EEG experiments, especially when focusing on children and adolescents.
url
https://doi.org/10.1523/ENEURO.0384-25.2026View
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