Viselkedési neurobiológia (pl. alvás, tudatosság, jobb- és balkezesség)
How memory representations are shaped during and after their encoding is a central
question in the study of human memory. Recognition responses to stimuli that are similar
to those observed previously can hint at the fidelity of the memories or point to
processes of generalization at the expense of precise memory representations. Experimental
studies utilizing this approach showed that emotions and sleep both influence these
responses. Sleep, and more specifically rapid eye movement sleep, is assumed to facilitate
the generalization of emotional memories. We studied mnemonic discrimination by the
emotional variant of the Mnemonic Separation Task in participants (N = 113) who spent
a daytime nap between learning and testing compared with another group that spent
an equivalent time awake between the two sessions. Our findings indicate that the
discrimination of similar but previously not seen items from previously seen ones
is enhanced in case of negative compared with neutral and positive stimuli. Moreover,
whereas the sleep and the wake groups did not differ in memory performance, participants
entering rapid eye movement sleep exhibited increased generalization of emotional
memories. Our findings indicate that entering into rapid eye movement sleep during
a daytime nap shapes emotional memories in a way that enhances recognition at the
expense of detailed memory representations.