Clemens Z, Fabó D, Halász P
National Institute of Psychiatry and Neurology, Department of Neurology, H-1021 Budapest, Huvösvölgyi út 116, Hungary.
Neuroscience. 2005;132(2):529-35. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroscience.2005.01.011.
Despite strong evidence supporting a role for sleep in the consolidation of newly acquired declarative memories, the contribution of specific sleep stages remains controversial. Based on electrophysiological studies in animals, synchronous sleep oscillations have been long proposed as possible origins of sleep-related memory improvement. Nevertheless, no studies to date have directly investigated the impact of sleep oscillations on overnight memory retention in humans. In the present study we provide evidence that overnight verbal memory retention is highly correlated with the number of sleep spindles detected by an automatic algorithm over left frontocentral areas. At the same time, overnight retention of newly learned faces was found to be independent of spindle activity but correlated with non-rapid-eye-movement sleep time. The data strongly support theories suggesting a link between sleep spindle activity and verbal memory consolidation.
尽管有强有力的证据支持睡眠在巩固新获得的陈述性记忆中发挥作用,但特定睡眠阶段的贡献仍存在争议。基于对动物的电生理研究,长期以来人们一直认为同步睡眠振荡可能是睡眠相关记忆改善的根源。然而,迄今为止,尚无研究直接调查睡眠振荡对人类夜间记忆保持的影响。在本研究中,我们提供的证据表明,夜间言语记忆保持与通过自动算法在左额中央区域检测到的睡眠纺锤波数量高度相关。同时,发现新学面孔的夜间保持与纺锤波活动无关,但与非快速眼动睡眠时间相关。这些数据有力地支持了表明睡眠纺锤波活动与言语记忆巩固之间存在联系的理论。