Sharman Rachel, Kyle Simon D, Espie Colin A, Tamm Sandra
Sleep and Circadian Neuroscience Institute (SCNi), Nuffield Department of Clinical Neurosciences, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.
Centre for Psychiatry Research, Department of Clinical Neuroscience, Karolinska Institutet, & Stockholm Health Care Services, Stockholm, Sweden.
J Sleep Res. 2024 Aug;33(4):e14094. doi: 10.1111/jsr.14094. Epub 2023 Nov 27.
Experimental studies suggest that short or disrupted sleep impairs memory consolidation, mood, and perception of emotional stimuli. However, studies have chiefly relied on laboratory-based study designs and small sample sizes. The aim of this fully online and pre-registered study was to investigate the association between sleep and overnight memory consolidation, emotion perception, and affect in a large, self-selected UK sample. A total of 1646 participants (473 completed) took part in an online study, where they completed a declarative (word-pairs) memory task, emotion perception task (valence ratings of images), and rated their affect within 2 h of bed-time. The following morning, participants reported on their state affect, sleep for the previous night, completed a cued recall task for the previously presented word-pairs, rated the valence of previously viewed images, and completed a surprise recognition task. Demographic data and habitual sleep quality and duration (sleep traits) were also recorded. Habitual sleep traits were associated with immediate recall for the word-pairs task, while self-reported sleep parameters for the specific night were not associated with overnight memory consolidation. Neither habitual sleep traits, nor nightly sleep parameters were associated with unpleasantness ratings to negative stimuli or overnight habituation. Habitual poor sleep was associated with less positive and more negative affect, and morning affect was predicted by the specific night's sleep. This study suggests that overnight emotional processing and declarative memory may not be associated with self-reported sleep across individuals. More work is needed to understand how findings from laboratory-based studies extrapolate to real-world samples and contexts.
实验研究表明,短睡眠或睡眠中断会损害记忆巩固、情绪以及对情绪刺激的感知。然而,这些研究主要依赖基于实验室的研究设计且样本量较小。这项完全在线且预先注册的研究旨在调查在一个大型的、自我选择的英国样本中,睡眠与夜间记忆巩固、情绪感知和情感之间的关联。共有1646名参与者(473人完成)参与了一项在线研究,他们在临睡前2小时内完成了一项陈述性(词对)记忆任务、情绪感知任务(对图像的效价评分)并对自己的情感进行了评分。第二天早上,参与者报告了他们的状态情感、前一晚的睡眠情况,完成了对之前呈现的词对的线索回忆任务,对之前看过的图像的效价进行了评分,并完成了一项惊喜识别任务。还记录了人口统计学数据以及习惯性睡眠质量和时长(睡眠特征)。习惯性睡眠特征与词对任务的即时回忆相关,而特定夜晚的自我报告睡眠参数与夜间记忆巩固无关。习惯性睡眠特征和夜间睡眠参数均与对负面刺激的不愉快评分或夜间习惯化无关。习惯性睡眠不佳与较少的积极情感和较多的消极情感相关,且早晨的情感由特定夜晚的睡眠情况预测。这项研究表明,夜间情绪处理和陈述性记忆可能与个体自我报告的睡眠情况无关。需要开展更多工作来了解基于实验室的研究结果如何外推至现实世界的样本和情境。