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EEG sigma and slow‐wave activity during NREM sleep correlate with overnight declarative and procedural memory consolidation
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Citations
19
References
2012
Year
Sleep DisordersSleep HealthHealthy SubjectsBrain FunctionProcedural MemoriesElectroencephalographySocial SciencesNeurodynamicsMemorySleep PhysiologyNeurologyCognitive ElectrophysiologySlow‐wave ActivityCognitive NeuroscienceSleepCognitive ScienceMedicineProcedural Memory ConsolidationSleep SpindlesSleep RoutinesSleep DeprivationSystems NeuroscienceSynaptic PlasticitySleep DisorderNeurophysiologyEeg Signal ProcessingProcedural MemoryNeuroscienceBrain ElectrophysiologyCircadian RhythmMemory FormationSleep PsychologyEeg Sigma
Previous studies suggest that sleep-specific brain activity patterns such as sleep spindles and electroencephalographic slow-wave activity contribute to the consolidation of novel memories. The generation of both sleep spindles and slow-wave activity relies on synchronized oscillations in a thalamo-cortical network that might be implicated in synaptic strengthening (spindles) and downscaling (slow-wave activity) during sleep. This study further examined the association between electroencephalographic power during non-rapid eye movement sleep in the spindle (sigma, 12-16 Hz) and slow-wave frequency range (0.1-3.5 Hz) and overnight memory consolidation in 20 healthy subjects (10 men, 27.1 ± 4.6 years). We found that both electroencephalographic sigma power and slow-wave activity were positively correlated with the pre-post-sleep consolidation of declarative (word list) and procedural (mirror-tracing) memories. These results, although only correlative in nature, are consistent with the view that processes of synaptic strengthening (sleep spindles) and synaptic downscaling (slow-wave activity) might act in concert to promote synaptic plasticity and the consolidation of both declarative and procedural memories during sleep.
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