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睡眠加速了人类陈述性记忆的再稳定。

Sleep accelerates re-stabilization of human declarative memories.

机构信息

Unidad Ejecutora de Estudios de Neurociencias y Sistemas Complejos, CONICET, Universidad Nacional Arturo Jauretche, Hospital de Alta Complejidad en Red El Cruce "Néstor Kirchner", Florencio Varela, Argentina.

Institute of Medical Psychology and Behavioral Neurobiology, University of Tübingen, Tübingen, Germany.

出版信息

Neurobiol Learn Mem. 2019 Jul;162:1-8. doi: 10.1016/j.nlm.2019.04.012. Epub 2019 Apr 25.

Abstract

Consolidated memories can return to a labile state upon presentation of a reminder, followed by a period of re-stabilization known as reconsolidation. This period can take several hours, and if an amnesic agent (e.g. new learning) is administered inside the time window of reconsolidation (when the memory is still labile) the memory is impaired, whereas the memory remains unaffected if the amnesic agent is administered outside this time window. Sleep plays a fundamental role in the consolidation and integration of new memories, and recently sleep has also been implicated in memory reconsolidation. Here, we studied the role of sleep in accelerating the reconsolidation time window. On day 1, participants learned a list of syllable-pairs (List 1). On day 2, they received a reminder, followed by interference learning (List 2) administered either after 90 min of wakefulness, after 90 min of sleep, or after 10 h of wakefulness. On day 3, participants had to recall List 1 first, followed by List 2, and we assessed the Retrieval-Induced-Forgetting Effect (RIF) on List 2 as a measure of List 1 memory stability. We found that the 90 min sleep group showed an intact RIF effect similar to the 10 h wake group, reflecting stable List 1 memory after 90 min of sleep and after 10 h of wakefulness. However, the RIF effect was absent after 90 min of wakefulness, suggesting that the List 1 memory was still labile at that time. Moreover, the RIF effect in the 90 min sleep group was associated with power density in the slow oscillation frequency band (0.5-1 Hz) during SWS and S2. These findings suggest that 90 min of sleep accelerate memory re-stabilization after reminder presentation, shortening the reconsolidation time window and protecting the memory against subsequent interference. This rapid memory re-stabilization may depend on slow oscillation activity during NREM sleep.

摘要

巩固的记忆可以在提示后重新回到不稳定状态,随后是一个重新稳定的时期,称为再巩固。这个时期可能需要几个小时,如果在再巩固的时间窗口内(即记忆仍然不稳定时)给予遗忘剂(例如新的学习),记忆会受损,而如果在这段时间之外给予遗忘剂,则记忆不受影响。睡眠在新记忆的巩固和整合中起着至关重要的作用,最近睡眠也被牵连到记忆再巩固中。在这里,我们研究了睡眠在加速再巩固时间窗口中的作用。在第 1 天,参与者学习了一组音节对(List 1)。在第 2 天,他们接受了提示,随后进行干扰性学习(List 2),要么在清醒 90 分钟后,要么在睡眠 90 分钟后,要么在清醒 10 小时后进行。在第 3 天,参与者首先要回忆 List 1,然后回忆 List 2,我们评估了 List 2 上的检索诱导遗忘效应(RIF),作为 List 1 记忆稳定性的衡量标准。我们发现,90 分钟睡眠组表现出与 10 小时清醒组相似的完整 RIF 效应,反映了在 90 分钟睡眠后和 10 小时清醒后 List 1 记忆的稳定性。然而,在清醒 90 分钟后,RIF 效应消失,表明此时 List 1 记忆仍然不稳定。此外,90 分钟睡眠组的 RIF 效应与慢波睡眠(SWS)和 S2 期间慢振荡频带(0.5-1 Hz)中的功率密度有关。这些发现表明,90 分钟的睡眠可以加速提示后记忆的重新稳定,缩短再巩固时间窗口,并保护记忆免受后续干扰。这种快速的记忆重新稳定可能依赖于非快速眼动睡眠期间的慢波活动。

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