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年轻人和老年人从睡眠中受益,但在对“何事-何地-何时”自然事件进行记忆巩固时,从清醒状态下的活动中无法受益。

Young and Older Adults Benefit From Sleep, but Not From Active Wakefulness for Memory Consolidation of What-Where-When Naturalistic Events.

作者信息

Abichou Kouloud, La Corte Valentina, Hubert Nicolas, Orriols Eric, Gaston-Bellegarde Alexandre, Nicolas Serge, Piolino Pascale

机构信息

Laboratoire Mémoire Cerveau et Cognition (MC2Lab EA 7536), Institut de Psychologie, Université Sorbonne Paris Cité, Boulogne-Billancourt, France.

Institute of Memory and Alzheimer's Disease, Department of Neurology, Pitié-Salpêtrière Hospital, Paris, France.

出版信息

Front Aging Neurosci. 2019 Mar 20;11:58. doi: 10.3389/fnagi.2019.00058. eCollection 2019.

Abstract

An extensive psychological literature shows that sleep actively promotes human episodic memory (EM) consolidation in younger adults. However, evidence for the benefit of sleep for EM consolidation in aging is still elusive. In addition, most of the previous studies used EM assessments that are very different from everyday life conditions and are far from considering all the hallmarks of this memory system. In this study, the effect of an extended period of sleep was compared to the effect of an extended period of active wakefulness on the EM consolidation of naturalistic events, using a novel (What-Where-When) EM task, rich in perceptual details and spatio-temporal context, presented in a virtual environment. We investigated the long-term What-Where-When and Details binding performances of young and elderly people before and after an interval of sleep or active wakefulness. Although we found a noticeable age-related decline in EM, both age groups benefited from sleep, but not from active wakefulness. In younger adults, only the period of sleep significantly enhanced the capacity to associate different components of EM (binding performance) and more specifically the free recall of what-when information. Interestingly, in the elderly, sleep significantly enhanced not only the recall of factual elements but also associated details and contextual information as well as the amount of high feature binding (i.e., What-Where-When and Details). Thus, this study evidences the benefit of sleep, and the detrimental effect of active wakefulness, on long-term feature binding, which is one of the core characteristics of EM, and its effectiveness in normal aging. However, further research should investigate whether this benefit is specific to sleep or more generally results from the effect of a post-learning period of reduced interference, which could also concern quiet wakefulness.

摘要

大量心理学文献表明,睡眠能有效促进年轻人的情景记忆巩固。然而,关于睡眠对老年人情景记忆巩固有益的证据仍然难以捉摸。此外,以往的大多数研究使用的情景记忆评估方法与日常生活条件差异很大,远未考虑到该记忆系统的所有特征。在本研究中,使用一种新颖的(何事-何地-何时)情景记忆任务,该任务在虚拟环境中呈现,富含感知细节和时空背景,将延长睡眠时间的效果与延长清醒活动时间的效果进行比较,以研究对自然事件情景记忆巩固的影响。我们调查了年轻人和老年人在睡眠或清醒活动一段时间前后的长期何事-何地-何时及细节绑定表现。尽管我们发现情景记忆存在明显的年龄相关衰退,但两个年龄组都从睡眠中受益,而不是从清醒活动中受益。在年轻人中,只有睡眠时间显著提高了关联情景记忆不同成分的能力(绑定表现),更具体地说是何事-何时信息的自由回忆能力。有趣的是,在老年人中,睡眠不仅显著提高了事实元素的回忆能力,还提高了相关细节和背景信息以及高特征绑定(即何事-何地-何时和细节)的数量。因此,本研究证明了睡眠对长期特征绑定的益处以及清醒活动的有害影响,长期特征绑定是情景记忆的核心特征之一,以及其在正常衰老中的有效性。然而,进一步的研究应调查这种益处是否特定于睡眠,或者更普遍地是由于学习后干扰减少期的影响,这也可能与安静清醒有关。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/f93a/6435496/89c6ac5499a9/fnagi-11-00058-g001.jpg

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