4.5 Article

Targeted memory reactivation of face-name learning depends on ample and undisturbed slow-wave sleep

Journal

NPJ SCIENCE OF LEARNING
Volume 7, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41539-021-00119-2

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Mind Science Foundation
  2. National Science Foundation [BCS-1921678]
  3. National Institutes of Health [T32-MH06756, T32-NS047987]

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This study found that reactivating specific face-name memories during sleep can enhance name recall and face recognition, with sleep quality playing a key role in the effectiveness of this reactivation.
Face memory, including the ability to recall a person's name, is of major importance in social contexts. Like many other memory functions, it may rely on sleep. We investigated whether targeted memory reactivation during sleep could improve associative and perceptual aspects of face memory. Participants studied 80 face-name pairs, and then a subset of spoken names with associated background music was presented unobtrusively during a daytime nap. This manipulation preferentially improved name recall and face recognition for those reactivated face-name pairs, as modulated by two factors related to sleep quality; memory benefits were positively correlated with the duration of stage N3 sleep (slow-wave sleep) and negatively correlated with measures of sleep disruption. We conclude that (a) reactivation of specific face-name memories during sleep can strengthen these associations and the constituent memories, and that (b) the effectiveness of this reactivation depends on uninterrupted N3 sleep.

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