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Sleep transforms the cerebral trace of declarative memories
Authors:Gais Steffen  Albouy Geneviève  Boly Mélanie  Dang-Vu Thien Thanh  Darsaud Annabelle  Desseilles Martin  Rauchs Géraldine  Schabus Manuel  Sterpenich Virginie  Vandewalle Gilles  Maquet Pierre  Peigneux Philippe
Affiliation:Cyclotron Research Center, University of Liège, Allée du 6 Août 8, B30, 4000 Liège, Belgium
Abstract:After encoding, memory traces are initially fragile and have to be reinforced to become permanent. The initial steps of this process occur at a cellular level within minutes or hours. Besides this rapid synaptic consolidation, systems consolidation occurs within a time frame of days to years. For declarative memory, the latter is presumed to rely on an interaction between different brain regions, in particular the hippocampus and the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC). Specifically, sleep has been proposed to provide a setting that supports such systems consolidation processes, leading to a transfer and perhaps transformation of memories. Using functional MRI, we show that postlearning sleep enhances hippocampal responses during recall of word pairs 48 h after learning, indicating intrahippocampal memory processing during sleep. At the same time, sleep induces a memory-related functional connectivity between the hippocampus and the mPFC. Six months after learning, memories activated the mPFC more strongly when they were encoded before sleep, showing that sleep leads to long-lasting changes in the representation of memories on a systems level.
Keywords:fMRI   hippocampus   medial prefrontal cortex   memory
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