Abstract
Of late, an increasing number of studies have shown a strong relationship
between sleep and memory. Here we summarize a series of our own studies in
humans supporting a beneficial influence of slow-wave sleep (SWS) on
declarative memory formation, and try to identify some mechanisms that might
underlie this influence. Specifically, these experiments show that declarative
memory benefits mainly from sleep periods dominated by SWS, whereas there is
no consistent benefit of this memory from periods rich in rapid eye movement
(REM) sleep. A main mechanism of declarative memory formation is believed to
be the reactivation of newly acquired memory representations in hippocampal
networks that stimulates a transfer and integration of these representations
into neocortical neuronal networks. Consistent with this model, spindle
activity and slow oscillation-related EEG coherence increase during early
sleep after intense declarative learning in humans, signs that together point
toward a neocortical reprocessing of the learned material. In addition, sleep
seems to provide an optimal milieu for declarative memory reprocessing and
consolidation by reducing cholinergic activation and the cortisol feedback to
the hippocampus during SWS.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Subject
Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Cognitive Neuroscience,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology
Cited by
411 articles.
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