Sleep and retrieval practice both strengthen and distort story recollection.

Dan Denis, Carissa DiPietro, R Nathan Spreng, Daniel L Schacter, Robert Stickgold, Jessica D Payne
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Abstract

Over time, memories lose episodic detail and become distorted, a process with serious ramifications for eyewitness identification. What are the processes contributing to such transformations over time? We investigated the roles of post-learning sleep and retrieval practice in memory accuracy and distortion, using a naturalistic story recollection task. Undergraduate students listened to a recording of the "War of the Ghosts," a Native American folktale, and were assigned to either a sleep or wake delay group, and either a retrieval practice or listen-only study condition. We found higher accuracy after sleep compared to wake in the listen-only condition, but not in the retrieval practice condition. This effect was driven by participants in the wake, retrieval practice condition showing superior memory compared to the wake, listen-only condition. A similar pattern was found for memory distortion, with both sleep and retrieval practice being associated with more inferences of nonpresented, but story-related information, compared to the wake, listen-only condition. These findings suggest both sleep and retrieval practice contribute to narrative memory stabilization and distortion.

睡眠和检索练习都加强和扭曲了故事记忆。
随着时间的推移,记忆会失去情节细节并变得扭曲,这一过程会对目击者的身份识别造成严重影响。随着时间的推移,导致这种转变的过程是什么?我们利用自然故事回忆任务研究了学习后睡眠和检索练习在记忆准确性和失真中的作用。本科生聆听了美国土著民间故事 "鬼魂之战 "的录音,并被分配到睡眠或清醒延迟组,以及检索练习或只听故事的学习条件组。我们发现,在只听的条件下,睡眠后的准确率比清醒时高,而在检索练习条件下则不然。这种效应是由于在唤醒、检索练习条件下的参与者比在唤醒、纯听条件下的参与者表现出更高的记忆力。在记忆失真方面也发现了类似的模式,与仅唤醒和聆听条件相比,睡眠和检索练习都与更多未呈现但与故事相关的信息推断有关。这些研究结果表明,睡眠和检索练习都有助于叙事记忆的稳定和失真。
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