Relational Memory: A Daytime Nap Facilitates the Abstraction of General Concepts

It is increasingly evident that sleep strengthens memory. However, it is not clear whether sleep promotes relational memory, resultant of the integration of disparate memory traces into memory networks linked by commonalities. The present study investigates the effect of a daytime nap, immediately after learning or after a delay, on a relational memory task that requires abstraction of general concept from separately learned items. Specifically, participants learned English meanings of Chinese characters with overlapping semantic components called radicals. They were later tested on new characters sharing the same radicals and on explicitly stating the general concepts represented by the radicals. Regardless of whether the nap occurred immediately after learning or after a delay, the nap participants performed better on both tasks. The results suggest that sleep – even as brief as a nap – facilitates the reorganization of discrete memory traces into flexible relational memory networks.

[1]  G. Tononi,et al.  Sleep function and synaptic homeostasis. , 2006, Sleep medicine reviews.

[2]  K. Nakayama,et al.  Sleep-dependent learning: a nap is as good as a night , 2003, Nature Neuroscience.

[3]  Albert K. Lee,et al.  Memory of Sequential Experience in the Hippocampus during Slow Wave Sleep , 2002, Neuron.

[4]  B. McNaughton,et al.  Reactivation of hippocampal ensemble memories during sleep. , 1994, Science.

[5]  J. Born,et al.  Sleep inspires insight , 2004, Nature.

[6]  G Buzsáki,et al.  Memory consolidation during sleep: a neurophysiological perspective. , 1998, Journal of sleep research.

[7]  Rebecca L. Gómez,et al.  Naps Promote Abstraction in Language-Learning Infants , 2006, Psychological science.

[8]  Jan Born,et al.  Immediate as well as delayed post learning sleep but not wakefulness enhances declarative memory consolidation in children , 2008, Neurobiology of Learning and Memory.

[9]  H. Lau,et al.  Delayed Onset of a Daytime Nap Facilitates Retention of Declarative Memory , 2010, PloS one.

[10]  J. Born,et al.  Effects of early and late nocturnal sleep on priming and spatial memory. , 1999, Psychophysiology.

[11]  J. Siegel,et al.  Time for the sleep community to take a critical look at the purported role of sleep in memory processing. , 2005, Sleep.

[12]  K. M. Dallenbach,et al.  Obliviscence During Sleep and Waking. , 1924 .

[13]  Robert Stickgold,et al.  Sleep promotes generalization of extinction of conditioned fear. , 2009, Sleep.

[14]  H. Eichenbaum Hippocampus Cognitive Processes and Neural Representations that Underlie Declarative Memory , 2004, Neuron.

[15]  S. Ribeiro,et al.  Brain gene expression during REM sleep depends on prior waking experience. , 1999, Learning & memory.

[16]  Jessica D. Payne,et al.  Human relational memory requires time and sleep , 2007, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

[17]  M. Johns,et al.  A new method for measuring daytime sleepiness: the Epworth sleepiness scale. , 1991, Sleep.

[18]  E. Wolpert A Manual of Standardized Terminology, Techniques and Scoring System for Sleep Stages of Human Subjects. , 1969 .

[19]  Jessica D. Payne,et al.  The role of sleep in false memory formation , 2009, Neurobiology of Learning and Memory.

[20]  M. Tucker,et al.  Daytime napping: Effects on human direct associative and relational memory , 2010, Neurobiology of Learning and Memory.

[21]  M. Hasselmo Neuromodulation: acetylcholine and memory consolidation , 1999, Trends in Cognitive Sciences.

[22]  A. Rechtschaffen A manual of standardized terminology, techniques and scoring system for sleep of human subjects , 1968 .

[23]  R. Chervin Epworth sleepiness scale? , 2003, Sleep medicine.

[24]  R. Stickgold,et al.  Practice with Sleep Makes Perfect Sleep-Dependent Motor Skill Learning , 2002, Neuron.

[25]  M. Walker,et al.  Sleep deprivation impairs the accurate recognition of human emotions. , 2010, Sleep.