记忆巩固
神经科学
心理学
睡眠(系统调用)
陈述性记忆
认知心理学
合并(业务)
情景记忆
睡眠剥夺
编码(内存)
长期记忆
非快速眼动睡眠
认知
海马体
程序性记忆
清醒
英语
召回
工作记忆
作者
Lea Himmer,Elias Müller,Steffen Gais,Monika Schönauer
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.nlm.2016.11.019
摘要
There is robust evidence that sleep facilitates declarative memory consolidation. Integration of newly acquired memories into existing neocortical knowledge networks has been proposed to underlie this effect. Here, we test whether sleep affects memory retention for word-picture associations differently when it was learned explicitly or using a fast mapping strategy. Fast mapping is an incidental form of learning that references new information to existing knowledge and possibly allows neocortical integration already during encoding. If the integration of information into neocortical networks is a main function of sleep-dependent memory consolidation, material learned via fast mapping should therefore benefit less from sleep. Supporting this idea, we find that sleep has a protective effect on explicitly learned associations. In contrast, memory for associations learned by fast mapping does not benefit from sleep and remains stable regardless of whether sleep or wakefulness follows learning. Our results thus indicate that the need for sleep-mediated consolidation depends on the strategy used for learning and might thus be related to the level of integration of newly acquired memory achieved during encoding.
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