Diekelmann Susanne, Born Jan, Rasch Björn
Institute of Medical Psychology and Behavioral Neurobiology, University of Tübingen Tübingen, Germany.
Institute of Medical Psychology and Behavioral Neurobiology, University of TübingenTübingen, Germany; Center for Integrative Neuroscience (CIN), University of TübingenTübingen, Germany.
Front Behav Neurosci. 2016 Apr 12;10:74. doi: 10.3389/fnbeh.2016.00074. eCollection 2016.
Sleep consolidates newly acquired memories. Beyond stabilizing memories, sleep is thought to reorganize memory representations such that invariant structures, statistical regularities and even new explicit knowledge are extracted. Whereas increasing evidence suggests that the stabilization of memories during sleep can be facilitated by cueing with learning-associated stimuli, the effect of cueing on memory reorganization is less well understood. Here we asked whether olfactory cueing during sleep enhances the generation of explicit knowledge about an implicitly learned procedural memory task. Subjects were trained on a serial reaction time task (SRTT) containing a hidden 12-element sequence in the presence of an odor. During subsequent sleep, half of the subjects were re-exposed to the odor during periods of slow wave sleep (SWS), while the other half received odorless vehicle. In the next morning, subjects were tested on their explicit knowledge about the underlying sequence in a free recall test and a generation task. Although odor cueing did not significantly affect overall explicit knowledge, differential effects were evident when analyzing male and female subjects separately. Explicit sequence knowledge, both in free recall and the generation task, was enhanced by odor cueing in men, whereas women showed no cueing effect. Procedural skill in the SRTT was not affected by cueing, neither in men nor in women. These findings suggest that olfactory memory reactivation can increase explicit knowledge about implicitly learned information, but only in men. Hormonal differences due to menstrual cycle phase and/or hormonal contraceptives might explain the lacking effect in women.
睡眠巩固新获得的记忆。除了稳定记忆外,睡眠还被认为会重新组织记忆表征,从而提取不变结构、统计规律甚至新的显性知识。越来越多的证据表明,在睡眠期间通过与学习相关的刺激进行提示可以促进记忆的稳定,但提示对记忆重组的影响尚不太清楚。在这里,我们研究了睡眠期间的嗅觉提示是否会增强关于隐性学习的程序性记忆任务的显性知识的生成。受试者在存在一种气味的情况下接受包含隐藏的12元素序列的序列反应时任务(SRTT)训练。在随后的睡眠中,一半受试者在慢波睡眠(SWS)期间再次接触该气味,而另一半则接受无味载体。第二天早上,受试者在自由回忆测试和生成任务中接受关于潜在序列的显性知识测试。尽管气味提示并没有显著影响总体显性知识,但在分别分析男性和女性受试者时,差异效应很明显。在男性中,气味提示增强了自由回忆和生成任务中的显性序列知识,而女性则没有提示效应。SRTT中的程序性技能在男性和女性中均不受提示的影响。这些发现表明,嗅觉记忆再激活可以增加关于隐性学习信息的显性知识,但仅在男性中如此。月经周期阶段和/或激素避孕药引起的激素差异可能解释了女性中缺乏这种效应的原因。