4.3 Article

Encoding and consolidation of motor sequence learning in young and older adults

Journal

NEUROBIOLOGY OF LEARNING AND MEMORY
Volume 185, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.nlm.2021.107508

Keywords

Aging; Sleep; Motor learning; Encoding; Consolidation; fMRI

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01 AG040133]

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The study found that older adults demonstrate sleep-dependent consolidation of motor sequence learning after a daytime nap, while young adults showed high SRTT performance prior to the sleep interval and did not show further sleep-dependent performance improvements. The results suggest that aging-related deficiencies in fast learning processes may contribute to the observed sleep-dependent consolidation deficits in older adults.
Sleep benefits motor memory consolidation in young adults, but this benefit is reduced in older adults. Here we sought to understand whether differences in the neural bases of encoding between young and older adults contribute to aging-related differences in sleep-dependent consolidation of an explicit variant of the serial reaction time task (SRTT). Seventeen young and 18 older adults completed two sessions (nap, wake) one week apart. In the MRI, participants learned the SRTT. Following an afternoon interval either awake or with a nap (recorded with high-density polysomnography), performance on the SRTT was reassessed in the MRI. Imaging and behavioral results from SRTT performance showed clear sleep-dependent consolidation of motor sequence learning in older adults after a daytime nap, compared to an equal interval awake. Young adults, however, showed brain activity and behavior during encoding consistent with high SRTT performance prior to the sleep interval, and did not show further sleep-dependent performance improvements. Young adults did show reduced cortical activity following sleep, suggesting potential systems-level consolidation related to automatization. Sleep physiology data showed that sigma activity topography was affected by hippocampal and cortical activation prior to the nap in both age groups, and suggested a role of theta activity in sleep-dependent automatization in young adults. These results suggest that previously observed aging-related sleep-dependent consolidation deficits may be driven by aging-related deficiencies in fast learning processes. Here we demonstrate that when sufficient encoding strength is reached with additional training, older adults demonstrate intact sleep-dependent consolidation of motor sequence learning.

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