Sleep Now, Remember Later

http://www.newsweek.com/id/194650

Researchers are exploring the mysterious and 
important links between memory and slumber.
By Robert Stickgold, PH.D., and Peter Wehrwein | NEWSWEEK

Published Apr 18, 2009
 From the magazine issue dated Apr 27, 2009

    * 
<http://www.newsweek.com/id/194583?tid=relatedcl>Health 
for Life: The Science of Forgetting
    * 
<http://www.newsweek.com/id/194554?tid=relatedcl>Health 
for Life MD Answers Your Memory Questions
  For many years, people believed that the brain, 
like the body, rested during sleep. After all, we 
are rendered unconscious by sleep. Perhaps, it 
was thought, the brain just needs to stop 
thinking for a few hours every day. Wrong. During 
sleep, our brain­the organ that directs us to 
sleep­is itself extraordinarily active. And much 
of that activity helps the brain to learn, to remember and to make connections.




HEALTH FOR LIFE

<http://www.newsweek.com/id/194583>
[]

<http://www.newsweek.com/id/194583>


<http://www.newsweek.com/id/194583>To Pluck a Rooted Sorrow

Claudia Kalb

Can painful, unwanted memories be altered or even 
eradicated? That's the provocative question being 
raised by the emerging science of forgetting.


<http://www.newsweek.com/id/194650>The Link Between Sleep and Memory

<http://www.newsweek.com/id/194554>MD Answers Your Memory Questions

<http://www.newsweek.com/id/194275>Photos: Memorable Amnesiacs

It wasn't so long ago that the rueful joke in 
research circles was that everyone knew sleep had 
something to do with memory­except for the people 
who study sleep and the people who study memory. 
Then, in 1994, Israeli researchers reported that 
the average performance for a group of people on 
a memory test improved when the test was repeated 
after a break of many hours­during which some 
subjects slept and others did not. In 2000, a 
Harvard team demonstrated that this improvement occurred only during sleep.

There are several different types of 
memory­including declarative (retrievable, 
fact-based information), episodic (events from 
your life) and procedural (how to do 
something)­and researchers have designed ways to 
test each of them. In almost every case, whether 
the test involves remembering pairs of words, 
tapping numbered keys in a certain order or 
figuring out the rules in a weather-prediction 
game, "sleeping on it" after first learning the 
task improves performance. It's as if our brains 
squeeze in some extra practice time while we're asleep.

This isn't to say that we can't form memories 
when we're awake. If someone tells you his name, 
you don't need to fall asleep to remember it. But 
sleep will make it more likely that you do. 
Sleep-deprivation experiments have shown that a 
tired brain has a difficult time capturing 
memories of all sorts. Interestingly, sleep 
deprivation is more likely to cause us to forget 
information associated with positive emotion than 
information linked to negative emotion. This 
could explain, at least in part, why sleep 
deprivation can trigger depression in some 
people: memories tainted with negative emotions 
are more likely than positive ones to "stick" in the sleep-deprived brain.

Sleep also seems to be the time when the brain's 
two memory systems­the hippocampus and the 
neocortex­"talk" with one other. Experiences that 
become memories are laid down first in the 
hippocampus, obliterating whatever is underneath. 
If a memory is to be retained, it must be shipped 
from the hippocampus to a place where it will 
endure­the neocortex, the wrinkled outer layer of 
the brain where higher thinking takes place. 
Unlike the hippocampus, the neocortex is a master 
at weaving the old with the new. And partly 
because it keeps incoming information at bay, 
sleep is the best time for the "undistracted" 
hippocampus to shuttle memories to the neocortex, 
and for the neocortex to link them to related memories.

How sleep helps us consolidate memories is still 
largely a mystery. A recent study from the 
University of Lübeck, in 
<http://www.newsweek.com/related.aspx?subject=Germany>Germany, 
offers one clue. Subjects were given a list of 46 
word pairs to memorize, just before sleep. 
Shortly after they fell asleep, as they reached 
the deepest stages of sleep, electrical currents 
were sent through electrodes on their heads to 
induce very slow brain waves. Such slow waves 
were induced at random in the brains of one group 
of subjects, but not another. The next morning, 
the slow-wave group had better recall of the 
words. Other types of memory were not improved, 
and inducing the slow waves later in the night 
did not have the same effect. Why and how the 
slow waves improved memory is not yet understood, 
but they are thought to alter the strengths of 
chemical connections, or synapses, between 
specific pairs of nerve cells in the brain. 
Memories are "stored" in these synapses: changing 
the strength of the synapses increases the strength of the memories they store.

It's not just memory that is improved by sleep. 
Recent studies indicate that sleep not only helps 
store facts, it also helps make connections 
between them. Scientific history is replete with 
tales of scientists with nocturnal "aha!" 
experiences. Dmitri Mendeleev awakened from a 
dream that gave him the idea for the periodic 
table of elements­a landmark in chemistry. Such 
anecdotes don't prove that sleep can produce 
insights, but a recent study by 
<http://www.newsweek.com/related.aspx?subject=Ullrich+Wagner>Ullrich 
Wagner and colleagues in Germany does. Wagner 
used a puzzle in which players were given a 
string of numbers, and required to make a series 
of seven calculations based on these numbers. The 
seventh calculation (which depended on the 
preceding six) was the "answer." Participants 
repeatedly played the same game with the same 
rules, but different sets of numbers. Some of the 
players played the game in the morning, then did 
other things for eight hours or so, then played 
the game again. Others played the game first in 
the evening, then slept, then played it again after awakening.

The players who slept did somewhat better­but 
that was not the important result. Cleverly, the 
researchers structured the game such that the 
second calculation always gave the same answer as 
the seventh calculation­the final answer. If 
players recognized this "hidden rule," they could 
get to the final answer much faster­and speed was 
a part of the game. The players who slept were 
almost three times more likely to have the 
insight that allowed them to spot the hidden 
rule­even though none of the players had been 
told there was a hidden rule to spot. Sleeping 
had allowed them to connect the dots.

Why is this important? Some sleep researchers 
believe that for every two hours we spend awake, 
the brain needs an hour of sleep to figure out 
what all these experiences mean, and that sleep 
plays a crucial role in constructing the meaning 
our lives come to hold. Breakdowns in such 
sleep-dependent processing may contribute to the 
development of depression, and may explain why 
some people who experience horrific traumas go on to develop PTSD.

A better understanding of how sleep knits our 
memories together could lead to new technologies 
that improve learning, memory and creativity, and 
even help treat some psychiatric disease. But 
perhaps the most important reason for studying 
sleep is simply this: we are a curious species; 
we spend about a third of our lives asleep; and 
we realize how little we understand about that 
third of our lives. So we continue experimenting, 
hoping to understand sleep better. And perhaps 
someday we will. After we've slept on it.

Stickgold is associate professor of psychiatry at 
Harvard Medical School and Beth Israel Deaconess 
Medical Center. Wehrwein is editor of the Harvard 
Health Letter. For more information, go to 
<http://health.harvard.edu/Newsweek>health.harvard.edu/Newsweek.

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