睡眠(系统调用)
召回
结合属性
内容寻址存储器
记忆巩固
清醒
情景记忆
编码(内存)
多导睡眠图
联想(心理学)
计算机科学
财产(哲学)
联想学习
心理学
神经科学
认知心理学
认知
人工智能
脑电图
数学
海马体
人工神经网络
哲学
纯数学
心理治疗师
操作系统
认识论
作者
Nicolas D. Lutz,Estefanía Martínez-Albert,Hannah Friedrich,Jan Born,Luciana Besedovsky
标识
DOI:10.1073/pnas.2314423121
摘要
Sleep supports the consolidation of episodic memory. It is, however, a matter of ongoing debate how this effect is established, because, so far, it has been demonstrated almost exclusively for simple associations, which lack the complex associative structure of real-life events, typically comprising multiple elements with different association strengths. Because of this associative structure interlinking the individual elements, a partial cue (e.g., a single element) can recover an entire multielement event. This process, referred to as pattern completion, is a fundamental property of episodic memory. Yet, it is currently unknown how sleep affects the associative structure within multielement events and subsequent processes of pattern completion. Here, we investigated the effects of post-encoding sleep, compared with a period of nocturnal wakefulness (followed by a recovery night), on multielement associative structures in healthy humans using a verbal associative learning task including strongly, weakly, and not directly encoded associations. We demonstrate that sleep selectively benefits memory for weakly associated elements as well as for associations that were not directly encoded but not for strongly associated elements within a multielement event structure. Crucially, these effects were accompanied by a beneficial effect of sleep on the ability to recall multiple elements of an event based on a single common cue. In addition, retrieval performance was predicted by sleep spindle activity during post-encoding sleep. Together, these results indicate that sleep plays a fundamental role in shaping associative structures, thereby supporting pattern completion in complex multielement events.
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