心理学
记忆巩固
慢波睡眠
非快速眼动睡眠
睡眠剥夺
睡眠(系统调用)
多导睡眠图
外显记忆
召回
内隐记忆
听力学
眼球运动
认知心理学
快速眼动睡眠
发展心理学
认知
情景记忆
神经科学
脑电图
海马体
医学
操作系统
计算机科学
作者
Sarah J. Casey,Luke Solomons,Joerg Steier,Neeraj Kabra,Anna M Burnside,Martino F. Pengo,John Moxham,Laura H. Goldstein,Michael D. Kopelman
摘要
It has been debated whether different stages in the human sleep cycle preferentially mediate the consolidation of explicit and implicit memories, or whether all of the stages in succession are necessary for optimal consolidation. Here we investigated whether the selective deprivation of slow wave sleep (SWS) or rapid eye movement (REM) sleep over an entire night would have a specific effect on consolidation in explicit and implicit memory tasks.Participants completed a set of explicit and implicit memory tasks at night, prior to sleep. They had 1 control night of undisturbed sleep and 2 experimental nights, during which either SWS or REM sleep was selectively deprived across the entire night (sleep conditions counterbalanced across participants). Polysomnography recordings quantified precisely the amount of SWS and REM sleep that occurred during each of the sleep conditions, and spindle counts were recorded. In the morning, participants completed the experimental tasks in the same sequence as the night before.SWS deprivation disrupted the consolidation of explicit memories for visuospatial information (ηp2 = .23), and both SWS (ηp2 = .53) and REM sleep (ηp2 = .52) deprivation adversely affected explicit verbal recall. Neither SWS nor REM sleep deprivation affected aspects of short-term or working memory, and did not affect measures of verbal implicit memory. Spindle counts did not correlate significantly with memory performance.These findings demonstrate the importance of measuring the sleep cycles throughout the entire night, and the contribution of both SWS and REM sleep to memory consolidation. (PsycINFO Database Record
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI