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Complementary roles of slow-wave sleep and rapid eye movement sleep in emotional memory consolidation

Version 2 2024-03-12, 12:31
Version 1 2024-03-01, 08:43
journal contribution
posted on 2024-03-12, 12:31 authored by Scott A. Cairney, Simon DurrantSimon Durrant, Rebecca Power, Penelope A. Lewis
<p>Although rapid eye movement sleep (REM) is regularly implicated in emotional memory consolidation, the role of slow-wave sleep (SWS) in this process is largely uncharacterized. In the present study, we investigated the relative impacts of nocturnal SWS and REM upon the consolidation of emotional memories using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and polysomnography (PSG). Participants encoded emotionally positive, negative, and neutral images (remote memories) before a night of PSG-monitored sleep. Twenty-four hours later, they encoded a second set of images (recent memories) immediately before a recognition test in an MRI scanner. SWS predicted superior memory for remote negative images and a reduction in right hippocampal responses during the recollection of these items. REM, however, predicted an overnight increase in hippocampal–neocortical connectivity associated with negative remote memory. These findings provide physiological support for sequential views of sleep-dependent memory processing, demonstrating that SWS and REM serve distinct but complementary functions in consolidation. Furthermore, these findings extend those ideas to emotional memory by showing that, once selectively reorganized away from the hippocampus during SWS, emotionally aversive representations undergo a comparably targeted process during subsequent REM.</p>

History

School affiliated with

  • School of Psychology (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

Cerebral Cortex

Volume

25

Issue

6

Pages/Article Number

1565-1575

Publisher

Oxford University Press

ISSN

1047-3211

eISSN

1460-2199

Date Submitted

2014-02-10

Date Accepted

2013-01-01

Date of First Publication

2014-01-09

Date of Final Publication

2015-06-01

Date Document First Uploaded

2014-02-19

ePrints ID

13321

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