Consolidation of emotional memory during waking rest depends on trait anxiety

IF 2.2 4区 心理学 Q3 BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES
Lauren Hudachek , Erin J. Wamsley
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

A short period of eyes-closed waking rest improves long-term memory for recently learned information, including declarative, spatial, and procedural memory. However, the effect of rest on emotional memory consolidation remains unknown. This preregistered study aimed to establish whether post-encoding rest affects emotional memory and how anxiety levels might modulate this effect. Participants completed a modified version of the dot-probe attention task that involved reacting to and encoding word stimuli appearing underneath emotionally negative or neutral photos. We tested the effect of waking rest on memory for these words and pictures by manipulating the state that participants entered just after this task (rest vs. active wake). Trait anxiety levels were measured using the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory and examined as a covariate. Waking rest improved emotional memory consolidation for individuals high in trait anxiety. These results suggest that the beneficial effect of waking rest on memory extends into the emotional memory domain but depends on individual characteristics such as anxiety.

清醒休息时情绪记忆的巩固取决于特质焦虑。
短时间的闭眼清醒休息能改善对最近所学信息的长期记忆,包括陈述性记忆、空间记忆和程序性记忆。然而,休息对情绪记忆巩固的影响仍然未知。这项预先登记的研究旨在确定编码后休息是否会影响情绪记忆,以及焦虑水平会如何调节这种影响。受试者完成了一项改良版的点探测注意力任务,该任务涉及对出现在情绪负面或中性照片下方的单词刺激做出反应并进行编码。我们通过操纵受试者在完成这项任务后进入的状态(休息与主动唤醒),测试了唤醒休息对这些词语和图片记忆的影响。特质焦虑水平使用国家特质焦虑量表进行测量,并作为协变量进行研究。对于特质焦虑水平较高的人来说,唤醒休息能改善情绪记忆的巩固。这些结果表明,唤醒休息对记忆的有利影响延伸到了情绪记忆领域,但这取决于焦虑等个体特征。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.10
自引率
7.40%
发文量
77
审稿时长
12.6 weeks
期刊介绍: Neurobiology of Learning and Memory publishes articles examining the neurobiological mechanisms underlying learning and memory at all levels of analysis ranging from molecular biology to synaptic and neural plasticity and behavior. We are especially interested in manuscripts that examine the neural circuits and molecular mechanisms underlying learning, memory and plasticity in both experimental animals and human subjects.
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