Sleep and Memory

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Sleep and Memory

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Science wrote: ATLANTA, GEORGIA--Going a night without sleep may cause your hippocampus to go on strike. A new study has caught this crucial memory-encoding brain region slacking off in college students the day after they've pulled an all-nighter. The study is one of the first to investigate how sleep deprivation interferes with memory mechanisms in the human brain.

Neuroscientist Matthew Walker of Harvard University and his colleagues paid 10 undergraduate students to forgo a night's sleep. The next day, the students viewed a series of 30 words, and two days later--after having two nights to catch up on their sleep--the students returned to the lab and took a test to see how well they remembered the words they'd seen.

The students recalled about 40% fewer words overall than a group of 10 students who had slept normally, Walker reported here yesterday at the annual meeting of the Society for Neuroscience. But the researchers also found that the emotional content of the words made a big difference in what people remembered. Previous studies have found that both positive and negative emotions bolster memory, but in the current study, negatively charged words (such as cancer or jail) seemed to penetrate the sleep-deprived brain more deeply than positive ones (such as happy or sunshine). Indeed, sleep-deprived students were only 19% worse than their well-rested counterparts at remembering negative words, but 59% worse for positive words. Walker suspects the difference may reflect an evolutionary safeguard against forgetting potential threats.

To find out which part of the brain was responsible for this forgetfulness, the researchers repeated the experiment with a different group of undergrads, but this time used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to monitor brain activity while the students viewed a set of emotionally neutral photographs. The fMRI scans revealed lower activity in the hippocampus of sleep-deprived students than in well-rested students. This suggests that just as sleep is important for consolidating new memories after they're learned, as other studies have shown, it's equally important for preparing the brain to learn new things the following day, Walker says. His team is now using fMRI to investigate the emotional memory bias.

The work raises many interesting questions about the relationships between sleep, memory, and emotion, says William Fishbein, a neuroscientist at the City College of New York. He adds that the findings are consistent with studies with rodents done in the 1970s that suggested that sleep deprivation prior to learning prevents new memories from sticking.
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Re: Sleep and Memory

Post by Loredoctor »

Science wrote:The fMRI scans revealed lower activity in the hippocampus of sleep-deprived students than in well-rested students. This suggests that just as sleep is important for consolidating new memories after they're learned, as other studies have shown,
This has been suspected for a long time. Good there is further support for this hypothesis.
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Post by Fist and Faith »

IMO, those negative words (cancer and jail) are more specific than the positive words (happy and sunshine), which makes them stronger. I'll bet results would have been more equal if the negative words were sad and night, or if the positive words were orgasm and graduation.
All lies and jest
Still a man hears what he wants to hear
And disregards the rest
-Paul Simon

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Post by Loredoctor »

Fist and Faith wrote:IMO, those negative words (cancer and jail) are more specific than the positive words (happy and sunshine), which makes them stronger. I'll bet results would have been more equal if the negative words were sad and night, or if the positive words were orgasm and graduation.
They probably factored that in - 'semantic weighting'.
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Post by Avatar »

*shrug* I pretty much made it through matric and uni on all-nighters. :lol: Didn't seem to hurt my results any. ;)

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Post by Loredoctor »

Avatar wrote:*shrug* I pretty much made it through matric and uni on all-nighters. :lol: Didn't seem to hurt my results any. ;)

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:lol: The brain varies alot between individuals. Some people can do that sort of thing - I know I can't.
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Post by Avatar »

No doubt. Anyway, I was just relating an anecdotal experience. I certainly don't contest the fact that slepp-deprivation has many negative effects on brain function. One nights worth though just wasn't bad for me. Also, the years of insomnia probably acclimatised me to it in the first place. ;)

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Post by Warmark »

Heh, guess i might start sleeping some more then.
But if you're all about the destination, then take a fucking flight.
We're going nowhere slowly, but we're seeing all the sights.
And we're definitely going to hell, but we'll have all the best stories to tell.


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Post by Gil galad »

Doesn't this just confirm what our parents have been telling us for years? :D
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Post by Loredoctor »

Gil galad wrote:Doesn't this just confirm what our parents have been telling us for years? :D
That the Hippocampus plays a role in memory? ;)
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Post by Xar »

Loremaster wrote:
Gil galad wrote:Doesn't this just confirm what our parents have been telling us for years? :D
That the Hippocampus plays a role in memory? ;)
Why of course... didn't your parents ever tell that to you when you were a child? :P
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