A tool for high-throughput quantification of sleep-wake transitions in data from noninvasive piezoelectric cage systems
Grant S. Mannino, Andrea Lugo, Sean M. Murphy, Mark R. Opp, Rachel K. Rowe

TL;DR
A new Excel-based tool helps measure sleep fragmentation in mice using noninvasive cage systems, revealing sex differences in sleep patterns.
Contribution
The first standardized, open-source tool for quantifying sleep fragmentation from piezoelectric cage data in rodents.
Findings
Female mice show more frequent sleep-wake transitions than males, especially during the light period.
The tool enables high-throughput analysis of sleep fragmentation with minimal user input.
The method is validated for consistency across multiple mouse cohorts.
Abstract
Quantifying sleep quality in rodent models is critical for understanding its impact on neurological health and disease. Piezoelectric cage systems enable rapid, noninvasive measurement of multiple sleep metrics for large sample sizes of rodents. Although sleep duration is commonly reported, sleep fragmentation, which is a key feature of sleep architecture implicated in neurodegenerative disease, circadian rhythm disruption, and injury models, is not directly measured. We developed a standardized Microsoft Excel™-based tool for quantifying sleep-wake transitions, a scalable proxy for sleep fragmentation, in data from rodents recorded using a piezoelectric cage system. The tool extracts transitions from 2-s binned activity data, which are output by the system's software. Our pipeline, which incorporates this tool, enables high-throughput analysis of sleep fragmentation across large…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSleep and Wakefulness Research · Sleep and related disorders · EEG and Brain-Computer Interfaces
