Diversity and noise effects in a model of homeostatic regulation of the sleep-wake cycle
Marco Patriarca, Svetlana Postnova, Hans A. Braun, Emilio, Hern\'andez-Garc\'ia, and Ra\'ul Toral

TL;DR
This paper investigates how intrinsic diversity and noise in orexin neurons influence sleep-wake cycle regulation, revealing that optimal sleep patterns emerge at intermediate diversity levels, highlighting diversity's constructive role.
Contribution
It introduces a novel model incorporating diversity and noise into sleep regulation, demonstrating diversity-induced resonance in sleep-wake cycles.
Findings
Optimal sleep-wake cycle occurs at intermediate diversity levels.
Limited evidence of stochastic resonance with noise variation.
Disorder in neuronal diversity can enhance sleep regulation efficiency.
Abstract
Recent advances in sleep neurobiology have allowed development of physiologically based mathematical models of sleep regulation that account for the neuronal dynamics responsible for the regulation of sleep-wake cycles and allow detailed examination of the underlying mechanisms. Neuronal systems in general, and those involved in sleep regulation in particular, are noisy and heterogeneous by their nature. It has been shown in various systems that certain levels of noise and diversity can significantly improve signal encoding. However, these phenomena, especially the effects of diversity, are rarely considered in the models of sleep regulation. The present paper is focused on a neuron-based physiologically motivated model of sleep-wake cycles that proposes a novel mechanism of the homeostatic regulation of sleep based on the dynamics of a wake-promoting neuropeptide orexin. Here this…
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