Lerner Itamar, Gluck Mark A
Center for Molecular and Behavioral Neuroscience, Rutgers University-Newark, Newark, NJ, United States.
Front Hum Neurosci. 2018 Oct 8;12:404. doi: 10.3389/fnhum.2018.00404. eCollection 2018.
Accumulating evidence suggests that sleep, and particularly Slow-Wave-Sleep (SWS), helps the implicit and explicit extraction of regularities within memories that were encoded in a previous wake period. Sleep following training on virtual navigation was also shown to improve performance in subsequent navigation tests. Some studies propose that this sleep-effect on navigation is based on explicit recognition of landmarks; however, it is possible that SWS-dependent extraction of implicit spatiotemporal regularities contributes as well. To examine this possibility, we administered a novel virtual navigation task in which participants were required to walk through a winding corridor and then choose one of five marked doors to exit. Unknown to participants, the markings on the correct door reflected the corridor's shape (from a bird's eye view). Detecting this regularity negates the need to find the exit by trial and error. Participants performed the task twice a day for a week, while their overnight sleep was monitored. We found that the more time participants spent in SWS across the week, the better they were able to implicitly extract the hidden regularity. In contrast, the few participants that explicitly realized the regularity did not rely on SWS to do so. Moreover, the SWS effect was strictly at the trait-level: Baseline levels of SWS prior to the experimental week could predict success just as well, but day-to-day variations in SWS did not predict day-to-day improvements. We propose that our findings indicate SWS facilitates implicit integration of new information into cognitive maps, possibly through compressed memory replay.
越来越多的证据表明,睡眠,尤其是慢波睡眠(SWS),有助于在先前清醒期编码的记忆中隐式和显式地提取规律。在虚拟导航训练后的睡眠也被证明能提高后续导航测试中的表现。一些研究提出,这种睡眠对导航的影响是基于对地标性建筑的明确识别;然而,依赖慢波睡眠的隐式时空规律提取也可能起到了作用。为了检验这种可能性,我们进行了一项新颖的虚拟导航任务,要求参与者走过一条蜿蜒的走廊,然后从五个有标记的门中选择一个出去。参与者不知道的是,正确门上的标记反映了走廊的形状(从鸟瞰视角)。检测到这种规律就无需通过试错来找到出口。参与者在一周内每天进行两次该任务,同时监测他们夜间的睡眠情况。我们发现,参与者在一周内慢波睡眠中花费的时间越多,他们就越能隐式地提取隐藏的规律。相比之下,少数明确意识到规律的参与者并非依赖慢波睡眠来做到这一点。此外,慢波睡眠的影响严格体现在特质层面:实验周之前慢波睡眠的基线水平同样可以预测成功,但慢波睡眠的每日变化并不能预测每日的进步。我们认为,我们的研究结果表明慢波睡眠可能通过压缩记忆回放促进新信息隐式整合到认知地图中。