Zeng Shengzi, Lin Xuanyi, Wang Jingxuan, Hu Xiaoqing
Department of Psychology, The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, China.
Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, University of California, San Francisco, USA.
Sleep. 2021 Nov 12;44(11). doi: 10.1093/sleep/zsab155.
Sleep plays a pivotal role in the off-line processing of emotional memory. However, much remains unknown for its immediate vs. long-term influences. We employed behavioral and electrophysiological measures to investigate the short- and long-term impacts of sleep vs. sleep deprivation on emotional memory.
Fifty-nine participants incidentally learned 60 negative and 60 neutral pictures in the evening and were randomly assigned to either sleep or sleep deprivation conditions. We measured memory recognition and subjective affective ratings in 12- and 60-h post-encoding tests, with EEGs in the delayed test.
In a 12-h post-encoding test, compared to sleep deprivation, sleep equally preserved both negative and neutral memory, and their affective tones. In the 60-h post-encoding test, negative and neutral memories declined significantly in the sleep group, with attenuated emotional responses to negative memories over time. Furthermore, two groups showed spatial-temporally distinguishable ERPs at the delayed test: while both groups showed the old-new frontal negativity (300-500 ms, FN400), sleep-deprived participants additionally showed an old-new parietal, Late Positive Component effect (600-1000 ms, LPC). Multivariate whole-brain ERPs analyses further suggested that sleep prioritized neural representation of emotion over memory processing, while they were less distinguishable in the sleep deprivation group.
These data suggested that sleep's impact on emotional memory and affective responses is time-dependent: sleep preserved memories and affective tones in the short term, while ameliorating affective tones in the long term. Univariate and multivariate EEG analyses revealed different neurocognitive processing of remote, emotional memories between sleep and sleep deprivation groups.
睡眠在情绪记忆的离线加工中起关键作用。然而,其即时影响与长期影响仍有许多未知之处。我们采用行为学和电生理学方法来研究睡眠与睡眠剥夺对情绪记忆的短期和长期影响。
59名参与者在晚上偶然学习了60张负面图片和60张中性图片,并被随机分配到睡眠或睡眠剥夺组。我们在编码后12小时和60小时的测试中测量了记忆识别和主观情感评分,并在延迟测试中记录了脑电图。
在编码后12小时的测试中,与睡眠剥夺相比,睡眠同样保留了负面和中性记忆及其情感基调。在编码后60小时的测试中,睡眠组的负面和中性记忆显著下降,对负面记忆的情感反应随时间减弱。此外,两组在延迟测试中表现出时空上可区分的事件相关电位:两组均表现出新旧额叶负波(300 - 500毫秒,FN400),而睡眠剥夺的参与者还表现出新旧顶叶晚期正成分效应(600 - 1000毫秒,LPC)。多变量全脑事件相关电位分析进一步表明,睡眠在记忆加工中优先考虑情绪的神经表征,而在睡眠剥夺组中两者较难区分。
这些数据表明,睡眠对情绪记忆和情感反应的影响是时间依赖性的:睡眠在短期内保留记忆和情感基调,而在长期内改善情感基调。单变量和多变量脑电图分析揭示了睡眠组和睡眠剥夺组在遥远的情绪记忆上不同的神经认知加工过程。