Cortical reactivations during sleep spindles following declarative learning

Increasing evidence suggests that sleep spindles are involved in memory consolidation, but few studies have investigated the effects of learning on brain responses associated with spindles in humans. Here we used simultaneous electroencephalography (EEG) and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fM...

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Veröffentlicht in:NEUROIMAGE 2019-07, Vol.195, p.104-112
Hauptverfasser: Jegou, Aude, Schabus, Manuel, Gosseries, Olivia, Dahmen, Brigitte, Albouy, Genevieve, Desseilles, Martin, Sterpenich, Virginie, Phillips, Christophe, Maquet, Pierre, Grova, Christophe, Thien, Thanh Dang-Vu
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container_title NEUROIMAGE
container_volume 195
creator Jegou, Aude
Schabus, Manuel
Gosseries, Olivia
Dahmen, Brigitte
Albouy, Genevieve
Desseilles, Martin
Sterpenich, Virginie
Phillips, Christophe
Maquet, Pierre
Grova, Christophe
Thien, Thanh Dang-Vu
description Increasing evidence suggests that sleep spindles are involved in memory consolidation, but few studies have investigated the effects of learning on brain responses associated with spindles in humans. Here we used simultaneous electroencephalography (EEG) and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) during sleep to assess haemodynamic brain responses related to spindles after learning. Twenty young healthy participants were scanned with EEG/fMRI during (i) a declarative memory face sequence learning task, (ii) subsequent sleep, and (iii) recall after sleep (learning night). As a control condition an identical EEG/fMRI scanning protocol was performed after participants over-learned the face sequence task to complete mastery (control night). Results demonstrated increased responses in the fusiform gyrus both during encoding before sleep and during successful recall after sleep, in the learning night compared to the control night. During sleep, a larger response in the fusiform gyrus was observed in the presence of fast spindles during the learning as compared to the control night. Our findings support a cortical reactivation during fast spindles of brain regions previously involved in declarative learning and subsequently activated during memory recall, thereby promoting the cortical consolidation of memory traces.
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title Cortical reactivations during sleep spindles following declarative learning
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