Rawson Annalise B, Nalluru Sumedha, O'Reilly Jill X, Barron Helen C
Wellcome Centre for Integrative Neuroimaging, University of Oxford, FMRIB, John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford, UK.
Medical Research Council Brain Network Dynamics Unit, Nuffield Department for Clinical Neurosciences, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.
Sci Rep. 2024 Dec 3;14(1):30097. doi: 10.1038/s41598-024-78906-1.
Periods of rest and sleep help us find hidden solutions to new problems and infer unobserved relationships between discrete events. However, the mechanisms that formulate these new, adaptive behavioural strategies remain unclear. One possibility is that memory reactivation during periods of rest and sleep has the capacity to generate new knowledge that extends beyond direct experience. Here, we test this hypothesis using a pre-registered study design that includes a rich behavioural paradigm in humans. We use contextual Targeted Memory Reactivation (TMR) to causally manipulate memory reactivation during awake rest. We demonstrate that TMR during rest enhances performance on associative memory tests, with improved discovery of new, non-directly trained associations, and no change observed for directly trained associations. Our findings suggest that memory reactivation during awake rest plays a critical role in extracting new, unobserved associations to support adaptive behavioural strategies such as inference.
休息和睡眠阶段有助于我们找到解决新问题的潜在方法,并推断离散事件之间未被观察到的关系。然而,形成这些新的适应性行为策略的机制仍不清楚。一种可能性是,在休息和睡眠阶段记忆的重新激活有能力产生超越直接经验的新知识。在这里,我们使用预先注册的研究设计来检验这一假设,该设计包括一项针对人类的丰富行为范式。我们使用情境靶向记忆重新激活(TMR)来在清醒休息期间因果性地操纵记忆重新激活。我们证明,休息期间的TMR提高了联想记忆测试的表现,能更好地发现新的、未直接训练的关联,而直接训练的关联则未观察到变化。我们的研究结果表明,清醒休息期间的记忆重新激活在提取新的、未被观察到的关联以支持诸如推理等适应性行为策略方面起着关键作用。