Centre for Sleep and Cognition, Human Potential Program, Yong Loo Lin School of Medicine, National University of Singapore, Singapore.
Sleep. 2021 Sep 13;44(9). doi: 10.1093/sleep/zsab069.
Existing literature suggests that sleep-dependent memory consolidation is impaired in older adults but may be preserved for personally relevant information. Prospective memory (PM) involves remembering to execute future intentions in a timely manner and has behavioral importance. As previous work suggests that N3 sleep is important for PM in young adults, we investigated if the role of N3 sleep in PM consolidation would be maintained in older adults.
Forty-nine young adults (mean age ± SD: 21.8 ± 1.61 years) and 49 healthy older adults (mean age ± SD: 65.7 ± 6.30 years) were randomized into sleep and wake groups. After a semantic categorization task, participants encoded intentions comprising four related and four unrelated cue-action pairs. They were instructed to remember to perform these actions in response to cue words presented during a second semantic categorization task 12 h later that encompassed either daytime wake (09:00 am-21:00 pm) or overnight sleep with polysomnography (21:00 pm-09:00 am).
The significant condition × age group × relatedness interaction suggested that the sleep benefit on PM intentions varied according to age group and relatedness (p = 0.01). For related intentions, sleep relative to wake benefitted young adults' performance (p < 0.001) but not older adults (p = 0.30). For unrelated intentions, sleep did not improve PM for either age group. While post-encoding N3 was significantly associated with related intentions' execution in young adults (r = 0.43, p = 0.02), this relationship was not found for older adults (r = -0.07, p = 0.763).
The age-related impairment of sleep-dependent memory consolidation extends to PM. Our findings add to an existing body of work suggesting that the link between sleep and memory is functionally weakened in older adulthood.
现有文献表明,老年人的睡眠依赖型记忆巩固受损,但对于与个人相关的信息,记忆巩固可能得到保留。前瞻性记忆(PM)涉及及时记住执行未来的意图,具有行为重要性。由于之前的工作表明 N3 睡眠对年轻人的 PM 很重要,我们研究了 N3 睡眠在 PM 巩固中的作用是否会在老年人中得到维持。
49 名年轻成年人(平均年龄 ± 标准差:21.8 ± 1.61 岁)和 49 名健康的老年人(平均年龄 ± 标准差:65.7 ± 6.30 岁)被随机分为睡眠组和清醒组。在语义分类任务后,参与者编码了包含四个相关和四个不相关的线索-动作对的意图。他们被指示记住在 12 小时后进行第二次语义分类任务时,根据呈现的提示词执行这些动作,第二次任务涵盖白天清醒(上午 9:00 至晚上 9:00)或包含多导睡眠图的夜间睡眠(晚上 9:00 至上午 9:00)。
显著的条件×年龄组×相关性交互表明,PM 意图的睡眠益处因年龄组和相关性而异(p = 0.01)。对于相关意图,与清醒相比,睡眠对年轻人的表现有益(p < 0.001),但对老年人没有益处(p = 0.30)。对于不相关的意图,睡眠并没有改善两组的 PM。虽然 N3 后编码与年轻人相关意图的执行显著相关(r = 0.43,p = 0.02),但在老年人中没有发现这种关系(r = -0.07,p = 0.763)。
睡眠依赖型记忆巩固的年龄相关损害扩展到 PM。我们的发现增加了现有研究的内容,表明睡眠和记忆之间的联系在老年期功能减弱。