ResearchScience

Isolated Brain Regions Display Sleep-Like Activity in Awake Patients, Study Reveals

Brain regions surgically isolated to treat epilepsy maintain sleep-like electrical activity for years post-procedure, according to recent findings. The study provides new insights into consciousness and unconscious states in neural tissue. Researchers compared EEG readings from disconnected brain areas with those of sleeping and awake individuals.

Brain Isolation Triggers Persistent Sleep Patterns

According to recent research published in PLoS Biology, portions of the brain surgically disconnected from the rest of the organ continue to exhibit slow, sleep-like brain waves even when the individual is fully awake. The findings, based on studies of children who underwent epilepsy surgery, provide new understanding of how consciousness manifests in neural tissue and what constitutes unconscious states within specific brain regions.