Department of Psychology, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, South Bend, Indiana 46556
Department of Psychiatry, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston, Massachusetts 02215.
J Neurosci. 2021 May 5;41(18):4088-4099. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0818-20.2021. Epub 2021 Mar 19.
Sleep has been shown to be critical for memory consolidation, with some research suggesting that certain memories are prioritized for consolidation. Initial strength of a memory appears to be an important boundary condition in determining which memories are consolidated during sleep. However, the role of consolidation-mediating oscillations, such as sleep spindles and slow oscillations, in this preferential consolidation has not been explored. Here, 54 human participants (76% female) studied pairs of words to three distinct encoding strengths, with recall being tested immediately following learning and again 6 h later. Thirty-six had a 2 h nap opportunity following learning, while the remaining 18 remained awake throughout. Results showed that, across 6 h awake, weakly encoded memories deteriorated the fastest. In the nap group, however, this effect was attenuated, with forgetting rates equivalent across encoding strengths. Within the nap group, consolidation of weakly encoded items was associated with fast sleep spindle density during non-rapid eye movement sleep. Moreover, sleep spindles that were coupled to slow oscillations predicted the consolidation of weak memories independently of uncoupled sleep spindles. These relationships were unique to weakly encoded items, with spindles not correlating with memory for intermediate or strong items. This suggests that sleep spindles facilitate memory consolidation, guided in part by memory strength. Given the countless pieces of information we encode each day, how does the brain select which memories to commit to long-term storage? Sleep is known to aid in memory consolidation, and it appears that certain memories are prioritized to receive this benefit. Here, we found that, compared with staying awake, sleep was associated with better memory for weakly encoded information. This suggests that sleep helps attenuate the forgetting of weak memory traces. Fast sleep spindles, a hallmark oscillation of non-rapid eye movement sleep, mediate consolidation processes. We extend this to show that fast spindles were uniquely associated with the consolidation of weakly encoded memories. This provides new evidence for preferential sleep-based consolidation and elucidates a physiological correlate of this benefit.
睡眠对于记忆巩固至关重要,一些研究表明某些记忆会被优先进行巩固。记忆的初始强度似乎是决定哪些记忆在睡眠中被巩固的一个重要边界条件。然而,在这种优先巩固中,睡眠纺锤波和慢波等巩固介导的振荡的作用尚未得到探索。在这里,54 名人类参与者(76%为女性)学习了三对单词,对每个单词的记忆强度进行了三次不同的编码,学习后立即进行回忆测试,然后在 6 小时后再次进行测试。其中 36 人在学习后有 2 小时的小睡机会,而其余 18 人则一直保持清醒。结果表明,在 6 小时的清醒时间内,弱编码记忆的衰退速度最快。然而,在小睡组中,这种影响减弱了,不同编码强度的遗忘率相当。在小睡组中,弱编码项目的巩固与非快速眼动睡眠期间快速睡眠纺锤波密度相关。此外,与慢波解耦的睡眠纺锤波独立于未解耦的睡眠纺锤波预测弱记忆的巩固。这些关系是弱编码项目特有的,纺锤波与中等或强记忆项目的记忆无关。这表明,睡眠纺锤波促进了记忆的巩固,部分原因是记忆强度。考虑到我们每天要编码无数的信息,大脑如何选择将哪些记忆存储为长期记忆?睡眠有助于记忆巩固,而且某些记忆似乎会优先获得这种好处。在这里,我们发现与保持清醒相比,睡眠与弱编码信息的更好记忆相关。这表明睡眠有助于减轻弱记忆痕迹的遗忘。快速睡眠纺锤波是非快速眼动睡眠的标志振荡,介导巩固过程。我们将其扩展到表明,快速纺锤波与弱编码记忆的巩固具有独特的相关性。这为基于睡眠的优先巩固提供了新的证据,并阐明了这种好处的生理相关性。