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Sleep and quiet wakefulness signify an idling brain hub for creative insights

Psychology

Sleep and quiet wakefulness signify an idling brain hub for creative insights

M. R. Fayed, K. Ghandour, et al.

Sleep and offline “idling” brain activity can replay past experiences and weave novel links across them, distilling rules and sparking creative insights that aid decision-making and navigation of complex situations. This review, conducted by Mostafa R. Fayed, Khaled Ghandour, and Kaoru Inokuchi, summarizes current research and future directions on how sleep and idling brain activity support memory consolidation and creativity.

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
Long-term potentiation of synaptic strength is fundamental to learning and memory. Memories are thought to be stored within specific neuronal populations (engrams) that are reactivated during sleep to consolidate stored information. Crucially, sleep and offline reactivations are linked not only to past experiences but also to anticipation of future events. During offline reactivation in sleep and quiet wakefulness, the brain can form novel links across diverse past experiences, creating qualitatively new information not initially available. This offline activity—termed the idling brain—is posited to abstract essential information, distill rules, and fuel creative ideas and insights. This review summarizes current research and future directions on how sleep and idling brain activity support cognitive functions, especially creative insights, with implications for information processing, decision-making and effective navigation of complex situations in daily life.
Publisher
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
Published On
Authors
Mostafa R. Fayed, Khaled Ghandour, Kaoru Inokuchi
Tags
long-term potentiation
engrams
sleep-dependent reactivation
idling brain
memory consolidation
creative insight
offline abstraction
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