4.8 Article

Updating memories of unwanted emotions during human sleep

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CURRENT BIOLOGY
卷 33, 期 2, 页码 309-+

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CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2022.12.004

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Post-learning sleep can contribute to memory consolidation, and this study aimed to determine if sleep could be used to modify or update emotional memories. The researchers found that using positive words during non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep reduced negative affective judgments of aversive events in post-sleep tests. Electroencephalogram (EEG) analyses showed that positive words modulated theta and spindle/sigma activity, and the success of affective updating was enhanced when positive words coincided with the up phase of slow oscillations during NREM sleep. These findings suggest the potential for modifying unwanted memories during sleep without consciously confronting them.
Post-learning sleep contributes to memory consolidation. Yet it remains contentious whether sleep affords opportunities to modify or update emotional memories, particularly when people would prefer to forget those memories. Here, we attempted to update memories during sleep, using spoken positive words paired with cues to recent memories of aversive events. Affective updating using positive words during human non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep, compared with using neutral words instead, reduced negative affective judgments in post-sleep tests, suggesting that the recalled events were perceived as less aversive. Electroencephalogram (EEG) analyses showed that positive words modulated theta and spindle/sigma activity; specifically, to the extent that theta power was larger for the positive words than for the memory cues that followed, participants judged the memory cues less negatively. Moreover, to the extent that sigma power was larger for the positive words than for the memory cues that followed, participants forgot more episodic details about aversive events. Notably, when the onset of individual positive words coincided with the up phase of slow oscillations (a state characterized by increased cortical excitability during NREM sleep), affective updating was more successful. In sum, we altered the affective content of memories via the strategic pairing of positive words and memory cues during sleep, linked with EEG theta power increases and the slow oscillation up-phase. These findings suggest novel possibilities for modifying unwanted memories during sleep, which would not require people to consciously confront memories that they prefer to avoid.

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