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Journal Article

Citation

Yordanova J, Kolev V, Bruns E, Kirov R, Verleger R. Sleep 2017; 40(11): e151.

Affiliation

Institute of Psychology II, University of Lübeck, 23562 Lübeck, Germany.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2017, American Academy of Sleep Medicine, Publisher Associated Professional Sleep Societies)

DOI

10.1093/sleep/zsx151

PMID

28958008

Abstract

STUDY OBJECTIVES: The present study explored the sleep mechanisms which may support awareness of hidden regularities.

METHODS: Before sleep, 53 participants learned implicitly a lateralized variant of the serial response-time task in order to localize sensorimotor encoding either in the left or right hemisphere and induce implicit regularity representations. Electroencephalographic (EEG) activity was recorded at multiple electrodes during both task performance and sleep, searching for lateralized traces of the preceding activity during learning. Sleep EEG analysis focused on region-specific slow (9-12 Hz) and fast (13-16 Hz) sleep spindles during non-rapid eye movement sleep.

RESULTS: Fast spindle activity at those motor regions that were activated during learning increased with the amount of post-sleep awareness. Independently of side of learning, spindle activity at right frontal and fronto-central regions was involved: There, fast spindles increased with the transformation of sequence knowledge from implicit before sleep to explicit after sleep, and slow spindles correlated with individual abilities of gaining awareness. These local modulations of sleep spindles corresponded to regions with greater pre-sleep activation in participants with post-sleep explicit knowledge.

CONCLUSIONS: Sleep spindle mechanisms are related to explicit awareness (1) by tracing the activation of motor cortical and right-hemisphere regions which had stronger involvement already during learning, and (2) by recruitment of individually consolidated processing modules in the right hemisphere. The integration of different sleep spindle mechanisms with functional states during wake collectively support the gain of awareness of previously experienced regularities, with a special role for the right hemisphere.


Language: en

Keywords

awareness; executive functions; implicit learning; memory consolidation; sleep spindles; slow waves

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