睡眠中有针对性的记忆再激活可以诱发重叠记忆的遗忘。

Learning & memory (Cold Spring Harbor, N.Y.) Pub Date : 2022-10-17 Print Date: 2022-11-01 DOI:10.1101/lm.053594.122
Bárður H Joensen, Marcus O Harrington, Sam C Berens, Scott A Cairney, M Gareth Gaskell, Aidan J Horner
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引用次数: 9

摘要

睡眠期间的记忆再激活可以将新的记忆形成长期的形式。记忆的重新激活可以通过在睡眠中传递听觉线索来诱导。尽管这种有针对性的记忆再激活(TMR)方法可以加强新获得的记忆,但研究往往集中在单一的联想记忆上。目前尚不清楚TMR如何影响重叠联想记忆的保留。这是至关重要的,因为在清醒时重复检索重叠的关联会导致遗忘,这种现象被称为检索诱发遗忘(RIF)。我们想知道,当TMR被用来提示睡眠中重叠成对关联的重新激活时,是否也会出现类似的遗忘模式。参与者学习重叠的成对信息——分别学习,与其他不相关的成对信息交叉学习。在睡眠期间,我们使用TMR提示重叠对的子集。虽然TMR增加了对第一个编码对的记忆,但减少了对第二个编码对的记忆。这种记忆保留模式只存在于未在睡觉前测试的配对中。结果表明,TMR可以导致遗忘,这种效果与清醒时的RIF相似。然而,这种效果并没有延伸到那些在睡觉前通过检索得到强化的记忆。因此,我们为睡眠期间的再激活诱导遗忘效应提供了证据。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Targeted memory reactivation during sleep can induce forgetting of overlapping memories.

Targeted memory reactivation during sleep can induce forgetting of overlapping memories.

Targeted memory reactivation during sleep can induce forgetting of overlapping memories.

Targeted memory reactivation during sleep can induce forgetting of overlapping memories.

Memory reactivation during sleep can shape new memories into a long-term form. Reactivation of memories can be induced via the delivery of auditory cues during sleep. Although this targeted memory reactivation (TMR) approach can strengthen newly acquired memories, research has tended to focus on single associative memories. It is less clear how TMR affects retention for overlapping associative memories. This is critical, given that repeated retrieval of overlapping associations during wake can lead to forgetting, a phenomenon known as retrieval-induced forgetting (RIF). We asked whether a similar pattern of forgetting occurs when TMR is used to cue reactivation of overlapping pairwise associations during sleep. Participants learned overlapping pairs-learned separately, interleaved with other unrelated pairs. During sleep, we cued a subset of overlapping pairs using TMR. While TMR increased retention for the first encoded pairs, memory decreased for the second encoded pairs. This pattern of retention was only present for pairs not tested prior to sleep. The results suggest that TMR can lead to forgetting, an effect similar to RIF during wake. However, this effect did not extend to memories that had been strengthened via retrieval prior to sleep. We therefore provide evidence for a reactivation-induced forgetting effect during sleep.

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