Cognition and Brain Plasticity Unit, Institute of Biomedicine Research of Bellvitge (IDIBELL), 08907 L'Hospitalet de Llobregat, Spain; Department of Basic Psychology, University of Barcelona, 08035 Barcelona, Spain.
Curr Biol. 2013 Sep 23;23(18):1769-75. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2013.07.006. Epub 2013 Sep 5.
Recent accumulating evidence in animals and humans has shown that memory strengthening occurs, at least partially, during sleep and relies on the covert reactivation of individual memory episodes. However, it remains to be determined whether the hippocampus critically promotes memory consolidation via the reactivation of individual memories during sleep. To investigate the hippocampal-dependent nature of this phenomenon in humans, we selected two groups of chronic temporal lobe epileptic (TLE) patients with selective unilateral (TLE+UHS) or bilateral (TLE+BHS) hippocampal sclerosis and a group of matched healthy controls, and we requested them to learn the association of sounds cueing the appearance of words. On the basis of other similar behavioral paradigms in healthy populations, sounds that cued only half of the learned memories were presented again during the slow-wave sleep stage (SWS) at night, thus promoting memory reactivation of a select set of encoded episodes. A memory test administered on the subsequent day showed that the strengthening of reactivated memories was observed only in the control subjects and TLE+UHS patients. Importantly, the amount of memory strengthening was predicted by the volume of spared hippocampus. Thus, the greater the structural integrity of the hippocampus, the higher the degree of memory benefit driven by memory reactivation. Finally, sleep-specific neurophysiological responses, such as spindles and slow waves, differed between the sample groups, and the spindle density during SWS predicted the degree of memory benefit observed on day 2. Taken together, these findings demonstrate that the hippocampus plays a crucial role in the consolidation of memories via covert reactivation during sleep.
最近在动物和人类身上积累的证据表明,记忆强化至少部分发生在睡眠中,并且依赖于个体记忆片段的隐性再激活。然而,仍需要确定海马体是否通过在睡眠中个体记忆的再激活来关键地促进记忆巩固。为了在人类中研究这种现象的海马依赖性,我们选择了两组患有选择性单侧(TLE+UHS)或双侧(TLE+BHS)海马硬化的慢性颞叶癫痫(TLE)患者和一组匹配的健康对照组,并要求他们学习声音提示单词出现的关联。基于健康人群中其他类似的行为范式,只有一半学习记忆的声音在夜间慢波睡眠(SWS)阶段再次呈现,从而促进了一组特定编码事件的记忆再激活。第二天进行的记忆测试表明,只有对照组和 TLE+UHS 患者的被激活记忆得到了强化。重要的是,记忆强化的程度可以由海马体的剩余体积预测。因此,海马体的结构完整性越高,由记忆再激活驱动的记忆获益程度就越高。最后,睡眠特有的神经生理反应,如纺锤波和慢波,在样本组之间存在差异,并且 SWS 期间的纺锤波密度预测了第二天观察到的记忆获益程度。总之,这些发现表明,海马体通过在睡眠中隐性再激活在记忆巩固中起着至关重要的作用。