Association of sleep spindle activity with executive functioning and intellectual ability in children and adolescents

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Abstract

Study Objectives Sleep spindles have been studied as an underlying mechanism of cognition. Prior research primarily relied on experimental studies of selective samples of healthy youth. We tested the relationship between spindle activity and cognition in youth from the general population. Methods Eight hundred and ninety-two sleep electroencephalographies (EEGs) from 9-hour polysomnography were leveraged from 456 typically developing children (median 8 years), and 258 typically developing adolescents (median 16 years) and youth with unmedicated psychiatric/behavioral disorders (89 children; 89 adolescents). Multivariable-adjusted linear regression models examined associations between sleep spindle density (SSD; number/minute) and peak spindle frequency (PSF; 10–16 Hz range) during N2 with Wechsler indices of processing speed, working memory, verbal intelligence, and nonverbal intelligence. We first analyzed typically developing and unmedicated psychiatric/behavioral youth, followed by an analysis of the 47 unmedicated attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) subgroup. Results In typically developing children, higher SSD and PSF were associated with better working memory and verbal intelligence. In adolescents, higher SSD was associated with better working memory and nonverbal intelligence, while slower PSF was associated with better nonverbal intelligence. Longitudinally, higher childhood SSD was associated with better adolescent nonverbal intelligence among typically developing youth. In youth with unmedicated psychiatric/behavioral disorders, spindle–cognition associations were lost, except in ADHD, where higher childhood SSD and slower adolescent PSF supported working memory. Conclusion Sleep spindles may serve as a biomarker for neural and cognitive maturation, with developmental differences reflecting key brain maturational changes from childhood to adolescence. While altered in unmedicated psychiatric/behavioral disorders, lowerfrequency spindles may provide a protective mechanism for working memory in adolescents with ADHD.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article numberzsaf184
JournalSleep
Volume48
Issue number12
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 1 2025

All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes

  • Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology
  • Clinical Psychology
  • Clinical Neurology
  • Physiology (medical)
  • Behavioral Neuroscience

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