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纺锤波慢波耦合与解决问题的能力:年龄的影响。

Spindle-slow wave coupling and problem-solving skills: impact of age.

机构信息

School of Psychology, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, ON, Canada.

Sleep Unit, The Royal's Institute of Mental Health Research, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, ON, Canada.

出版信息

Sleep. 2024 Jul 11;47(7). doi: 10.1093/sleep/zsae072.

Abstract

We examined how aging affects the role of sleep in the consolidation of newly learned cognitive strategies. Forty healthy young adults (20-35 years) and 30 healthy older adults (60-85 years) were included. Participants were trained on the Tower of Hanoi (ToH) task, then, half of each age group were assigned to either the 90-minute nap condition, or stayed awake, before retesting. The temporal co-occurrence between slow waves (SW) and sleep spindles (SP) during non-rapid eye movement sleep was examined as a function of age in relation to memory consolidation of problem-solving skills. We found that despite intact learning, older adults derived a reduced benefit of sleep for problem-solving skills relative to younger adults. As expected, the percentage of coupled spindles was lower in older compared to younger individuals from control to testing sessions. Furthermore, coupled spindles in young adults were more strongly coupled to the SW upstate compared to older individuals. Coupled spindles in older individuals were lower in amplitude (mean area under the curve; μV) compared to the young group. Lastly, there was a significant relationship between offline gains in accuracy on the ToH and percent change of spindles coupled to the upstate of the slow wave in older, but not younger adults. Multiple regression revealed that age accounted for differences in offline gains in accuracy, as did spindle coupling during the upstate. These results suggest that with aging, spindle-slow wave coupling decreases. However, the degree of the preservation of coupling with age correlates with the extent of problem-solving skill consolidation during sleep.

摘要

我们研究了衰老如何影响睡眠在巩固新学习的认知策略中的作用。共有 40 名健康的年轻成年人(20-35 岁)和 30 名健康的老年人(60-85 岁)参与了研究。参与者接受了汉诺塔(ToH)任务的训练,然后,每个年龄组的一半被分配到 90 分钟的小睡条件,或者保持清醒,然后进行重新测试。在非快速眼动睡眠期间,我们检查了慢波(SW)和睡眠纺锤波(SP)之间的时间协同作用,作为与记忆巩固问题解决技能相关的年龄函数。我们发现,尽管学习能力完好,但与年轻成年人相比,老年人在解决问题的技能方面从睡眠中获得的益处减少。正如预期的那样,与年轻个体相比,从对照到测试阶段,老年人的耦合纺锤波的百分比较低。此外,与年轻个体相比,年轻成年人的耦合纺锤波与慢波上状态的耦合更紧密。与年轻组相比,老年人的耦合纺锤波幅度(曲线下的平均面积;μV)较低。最后,在 ToH 上的离线准确性增益与老年人而不是年轻人的纺锤波与慢波上状态的耦合的百分率变化之间存在显著关系。多元回归显示,年龄解释了离线准确性增益的差异,慢波上状态的纺锤波耦合也是如此。这些结果表明,随着年龄的增长,纺锤波-慢波耦合减少。然而,与年龄相关的耦合保留程度与睡眠期间解决问题的技能巩固程度相关。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/0ebf/11236953/de4b7a3344b7/zsae072_fig5.jpg

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