logo
ResearchBunny Logo
Multiple memories can be simultaneously reactivated during sleep as effectively as a single memory

Psychology

Multiple memories can be simultaneously reactivated during sleep as effectively as a single memory

E. Schechtman, J. W. Antony, et al.

This groundbreaking research by Eitan Schechtman, James W Antony, Anna Lampe, Brianna J Wilson, Kenneth A Norman, and Ken A Paller reveals that multiple memories can be effectively consolidated in parallel during sleep. Sound cues were used to reactivate memories of objects, demonstrating that individual memory benefits remain intact regardless of the number of items learned together. Discover how our brain handles memory consolidation in complex scenarios!

00:00
00:00
~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
Memory consolidation involves the reactivation of memory traces during sleep. If different memories are reactivated each night, how much do they interfere with one another? We examined whether reactivating multiple memories incurs a cost to sleep-related benefits by contrasting reactivation of multiple memories versus single memories during sleep. First, participants learned the on-screen location of different objects. Each object was part of a semantically coherent group comprised of either one, two, or six items (e.g., six different cats). During sleep, sounds were unobtrusively presented to reactivate memories for half of the groups (e.g., “meow”). Memory benefits for cued versus non-cued items were independent of the number of items in the group, suggesting that reactivation occurs in a simultaneous and promiscuous manner. Intriguingly, sleep spindles and delta-theta power modulations were sensitive to group size, reflecting the extent of previous learning. Our results demonstrate that multiple memories may be consolidated in parallel without compromising each memory’s sleep-related benefit. These findings highlight alternative models for parallel consolidation that should be considered in future studies.
Publisher
Communications Biology
Published On
Jan 01, 2021
Authors
Eitan Schechtman, James W Antony, Anna Lampe, Brianna J Wilson, Kenneth A Norman, Ken A Paller
Tags
memory consolidation
sleep
reactivation
learning
cued recall
sleep spindles
delta-theta power
Listen, Learn & Level Up
Over 10,000 hours of research content in 25+ fields, available in 12+ languages.
No more digging through PDFs, just hit play and absorb the world's latest research in your language, on your time.
listen to research audio papers with researchbunny