Literature DB >> 26518596

Sleep Strengthens but does Not Reorganize Memory Traces in a Verbal Creativity Task.

Nina Landmann1, Marion Kuhn1, Jonathan-Gabriel Maier1, Bernd Feige1, Kai Spiegelhalder1, Dieter Riemann1, Christoph Nissen1.   

Abstract

STUDY
OBJECTIVES: Sleep after learning promotes the quantitative strengthening of new memories. Less is known about the impact of sleep on the qualitative reorganization of memory content. This study tested the hypothesis that sleep facilitates both memory strengthening and reorganization as indexed by a verbal creativity task.
METHODS: Sixty healthy university students (30 female, 30 male, 20-30 years) were investigated in a randomized, controlled parallel-group study with three experimental groups (sleep, sleep deprivation, daytime wakefulness). At baseline, 60 items of the Compound Remote Associate (CRA) task were presented. At retest after the experimental conditions, the same items were presented again together with 20 new control items to disentangle off-line incubation from online performance effects.
RESULTS: Sleep significantly strengthened formerly encoded memories in comparison to both wake conditions (improvement in speed of correctly resolved items). Offline reorganization was not enhanced following sleep, but was enhanced following sleep-deprivation in comparison to sleep and daytime wakefulness (solution time of previously incubated, newly solved items). Online performance did not differ between the groups (solution time of new control items).
CONCLUSIONS: The results support the notion that sleep promotes the strengthening, but not the reorganization, of newly encoded memory traces in a verbal creativity task. Future studies are needed to further determine the impact of sleep on different types of memory reorganization, such as associative thinking, creativity and emotional memory processing, and potential clinical translations, such as the augmentation of psychotherapy through sleep interventions.
© 2016 Associated Professional Sleep Societies, LLC.

Entities:  

Keywords:  CRA; RAT; consolidation; creativity; learning; memory; reorganization; sleep; sleep deprivation; strengthening

Mesh:

Year:  2016        PMID: 26518596      PMCID: PMC4763358          DOI: 10.5665/sleep.5556

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Sleep        ISSN: 0161-8105            Impact factor:   5.849


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