Publication | Open Access
Human Hippocampal Structure: A Novel Biomarker Predicting Mnemonic Vulnerability to, and Recovery from, Sleep Deprivation
62
Citations
49
References
2016
Year
Sleep DisordersBrain FunctionNeurophysiological BiomarkersSocial SciencesHuman Hippocampal StructureMemoryNeurologyCognitive NeuroscienceCircadian RhythmSleepCognitive ScienceInsomniaSleep DeprivationNeuroimaging BiomarkersSleep DisorderMemory LossNeuroscienceNew MemoriesMedicineMemory Formation
Sleep deprivation impairs the formation of new memories. However, marked interindividual variability exists in the degree to which sleep loss compromises learning, the mechanistic reasons for which are unclear. Furthermore, which physiological sleep processes restore learning ability following sleep deprivation are similarly unknown. Here, we demonstrate that the structural morphology of human hippocampal subfields represents one factor determining vulnerability (and conversely, resilience) to the impact of sleep deprivation on memory formation. Moreover, this same measure of brain morphology was further associated with the quality of nonrapid eye movement slow wave oscillations during recovery sleep, and by way of such activity, determined the success of memory restoration. Such findings provide a novel human biomarker of cognitive susceptibility to, and recovery from, sleep deprivation. Moreover, this metric may be of special predictive utility for professions in which memory function is paramount yet insufficient sleep is pervasive (e.g., aviation, military, and medicine).
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