Rodheim Katrina G, Jones Bethany J, Hollister Penelope R, Vane Morgan F, Spencer Rebecca M C
Neuroscience and Behavior Program, University of Massachusetts Amherst, Amherst, MA, USA.
Neuroscience and Behavior Program, University of Massachusetts Amherst, Amherst, MA, USA; Department of Psychological & Brain Sciences, University of Massachusetts Amherst, Amherst, MA, USA.
Neuropsychologia. 2025 Oct 10;217:109237. doi: 10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2025.109237. Epub 2025 Jul 24.
Sleep supports the consolidation of emotional memories. Young adults exhibit a bias towards consolidation of negative memories during sleep while older adults exhibit a bias towards consolidation of positive memories, which parallels known biases in emotional memory encoding. Yet it is unclear whether biases found after sleep are carried over from biases in encoding or if sleep amplifies or changes the emotional memory biases as prior studies did not include a measure of memory before the sleep/wake interval. The present study assessed emotional memory before and after intervals of sleep and wake to determine whether sleep biases the selectivity of emotional memory. Healthy young (N = 49) and older adults (N = 50) completed both a positive and negative emotional memory task. Emotional images were viewed, followed by an immediate recognition assessment before overnight sleep (Sleep group; YA = 27, OA = 29) or before a day awake (Wake group; YA = 22, OA = 21). Delayed recognition was assessed approximately 12-hrs later. Results indicate no emotional bias at encoding. After the 12-hr delay there was a significant interaction between the effects of condition (positive vs. negative) and group (Sleep vs. Wake) such that sleep (relative to wake) benefitted negative but not positive memories in both young and older adults. These findings suggest that sleep may selectively enhance negative emotional memory consolidation, consistent with prior findings in young adults but contradicting the expected shift toward positive memory consolidation previously reported in older adults. Despite age-related changes in sleep and memory, sleep-dependent negative emotional memory may be preserved in some older adult samples.
睡眠有助于巩固情绪记忆。年轻人在睡眠期间表现出对负面记忆巩固的偏向,而老年人则表现出对正面记忆巩固的偏向,这与情绪记忆编码中已知的偏向相似。然而,尚不清楚睡眠后发现的偏向是从编码偏向延续而来,还是睡眠像之前的研究所显示的那样增强或改变了情绪记忆偏向,因为之前的研究没有纳入睡眠/清醒间隔之前的记忆测量。本研究评估了睡眠和清醒间隔前后的情绪记忆,以确定睡眠是否会使情绪记忆的选择性产生偏向。健康的年轻人(N = 49)和老年人(N = 50)完成了一项正面和负面情绪记忆任务。观看情绪图片后,在夜间睡眠前(睡眠组;年轻成年人 = 27,年长成年人 = 29)或清醒一天前(清醒组;年轻成年人 = 22,年长成年人 = 21)进行即时识别评估。大约12小时后进行延迟识别评估。结果表明,在编码时没有情绪偏向。在12小时的延迟后,条件(正面与负面)和组(睡眠与清醒)的效应之间存在显著交互作用,即睡眠(相对于清醒)对年轻人和老年人的负面记忆都有好处,但对正面记忆没有好处。这些发现表明,睡眠可能会选择性地增强负面情绪记忆巩固,这与年轻人之前的研究结果一致,但与之前报道的老年人预期的向正面记忆巩固的转变相矛盾。尽管睡眠和记忆存在与年龄相关的变化,但睡眠依赖的负面情绪记忆在一些老年样本中可能得以保留。