4.6 Article

Learning New Vocabulary Implicitly During Sleep Transfers With Cross-Modal Generalization Into Wakefulness

Journal

FRONTIERS IN NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 16, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2022.801666

Keywords

associative learning; vocabulary acquisition; implicit memory; cross-modal generalization; sleep; EEG; slow wave; associative transfer

Categories

Funding

  1. ANR [ANR-10-LABX-0087, ANR-10-IDEX-0001-02]
  2. European Research Council (ERC project METAWARE)
  3. CIFAR
  4. DGA

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This study demonstrates that new associative memories formed during sleep can be implicitly transferred into wakefulness and generalized across sensory modalities. Frontal slow-wave responses to auditory stimuli during sleep can predict memory performance after awakening.
New information can be learned during sleep but the extent to which we can access this knowledge after awakening is far less understood. Using a novel Associative Transfer Learning paradigm, we show that, after hearing unknown Japanese words with sounds referring to their meaning during sleep, participants could identify the images depicting the meaning of newly acquired Japanese words after awakening (N = 22). Moreover, we demonstrate that this cross-modal generalization is implicit, meaning that participants remain unaware of this knowledge. Using electroencephalography, we further show that frontal slow-wave responses to auditory stimuli during sleep predicted memory performance after awakening. This neural signature of memory formation gradually emerged over the course of the sleep phase, highlighting the dynamics of associative learning during sleep. This study provides novel evidence that the formation of new associative memories can be traced back to the dynamics of slow-wave responses to stimuli during sleep and that their implicit transfer into wakefulness can be generalized across sensory modalities.

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