| Literature DB >> 28165489 |
Anna Kis1, Sára Szakadát2, Márta Gácsi3,4, Enikő Kovács5, Péter Simor6, Csenge Török1,7, Ferenc Gombos8, Róbert Bódizs2,8, József Topál1.
Abstract
The active role of sleep in memory consolidation is still debated, and due to a large between-species variation, the investigation of a wide range of different animal species (besides humans and laboratory rodents) is necessary. The present study applied a fully non-invasive methodology to study sleep and memory in domestic dogs, a species proven to be a good model of human awake behaviours. Polysomnography recordings performed following a command learning task provide evidence that learning has an effect on dogs' sleep EEG spectrum. Furthermore, spectral features of the EEG were related to post-sleep performance improvement. Testing an additional group of dogs in the command learning task revealed that sleep or awake activity during the retention interval has both short- and long-term effects. This is the first evidence to show that dogs' human-analogue social learning skills might be related to sleep-dependent memory consolidation.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28165489 PMCID: PMC5292958 DOI: 10.1038/srep41873
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Relative power spectra (proportion of total power) for (i). Non-REM and (ii). REM sleep, following the command learning and the non-learning task. Bin-by-bin data (mean ± SE for the N = 15 participating dogs) are shown on a logarithmic scale for both Non-REM and REM sleep.
Figure 2Relationship between performance improvement (the relative difference between pre-sleep and post-sleep performance) in the learning task, and relative delta power (left) as well as beta power (right) during post-learning REM sleep.
Mean ± SE performance (% of correct trials) of subjects in the different retention interval conditions (RICs).
| Obedience | Test occasion | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Baseline | Retest | Long-term | ||
| Sleep | 83.73 ± 3.88 | 57.54 ± 3.33 | 59.52 ± 4.14 | 67.77 ± 3.52 |
| Walk | 85.32 ± 4.18 | 49.21 ± 4.03 | 54.37 ± 3.91 | 61.11 ± 3.53 |
| Learn | 78.24 ± 4.61 | 55.93 ± 2.60 | 51.85 ± 4.40 | 56.48 ± 4.58 |
| Play | 74.24 ± 5.31 | 48.99 ± 4.29 | 43.94 ± 8.46 | 63.13 ± 5.72 |
Obedience, Baseline, Retest and Long-term performances are given as the percentage of correct responses in each of the 18-trial sessions.
Figure 3The differential learning patterns in the four retention interval conditions are revealed in subjects’ performance change (mean ± SE) at the Retest and Long-term occasions compared to Baseline.
Values >0 indicate a performance improvement at the given occasion, while values <0 indicate a decreased performance.