The study led by
researchers at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center (BIDMC) and Boston
College in the United States offers new insights into the specific components of emotional
memories, suggesting that sleep plays a key role in determining what we
remember – and what we forget.
The findings, reported in the August 2008 issue of the journal Psychological Science, show that a period of slumber helps the brain to
selectively preserve and enhance those aspects of a memory that are of
greatest emotional significance, while at the same time diminishing the
memory's neutral background details.
"This tells us that
sleep's role in emotional memory preservation is more than just
mechanistic," says the study's first author Jessica Payne, PhD, a
Harvard University research fellow in the Division of Psychiatry at
BIDMC. "In order to preserve what it deems most important, the brain
makes a tradeoff, strengthening the memory's emotional core and
obscuring its neutral background."
Previous studies have
established the key role that sleep plays in procedural memory,
demonstrating that the consolidation of procedural skills (such as
typing or playing the piano) is greatly enhanced following a period of
sleep.
But sleep's importance in the development of episodic
memories – in particular, those with emotional resonance– has been less
clear.
"Emotional memories usually contain highly charged
elements – for example, the car that sideswiped us on the ride home –
along with other elements that are only tangentially related to the
emotion, such as the name of the street we were traveling on or what
store we'd just passed," explains study author Elizabeth Kensinger,
PhD, an Assistant Professor in the College of Arts and Sciences at
Boston College. "We were interested in examining whether sleep would
affect memory for all of these elements equally, or whether sleep might
allow some of the event features to decay at a faster rate than others."
The
authors tested 88 college students. Study participants were shown
scenes that depicted either neutral subjects on a neutral background (a
car parked on a street in front of shops) or negatively arousing
subjects on a neutral background (a badly crashed car parked on a
similar street). The participants were then tested separately on their
memories of both the central objects in the pictures and the
backgrounds in the scenes. In this way, memory could be compared for
the emotional aspects of a scene (the crashed car) versus the
non-emotional aspects of the scene (the street on which the car had
crashed.)
Participants were divided into three groups. The first
group underwent memory testing after 12 hours spent awake during the
daytime; the second group was tested after 12 nighttime hours,
including their normal period of nighttime sleep; and the third
baseline group was tested 30 minutes after viewing the images, in
either the morning or evening.
"Our results revealed that the
study subjects who stayed awake all day largely forgot the entire
negative scene [they had seen], with their memories of both the central
objects and the backgrounds decaying at similar rates," says Payne.
But, she adds, among the individuals who were tested after a period of
sleep, memory recall for the central negative objects (i.e. the smashed
car) was preserved in detail.
"After an evening of sleep, the
subjects remembered the emotional items [smashed car] as accurately as
the subjects whose memories had been tested only 30 minutes after
looking at the scenes," explains Kensinger. "By contrast, sleep did
little to preserve memory for the backgrounds [i.e. street scenes] and
so memory for those elements reached a comparably low level after a
night of sleep as it did after a day spent awake."
"This is
consistent with the possibility that the individual components of
emotional memory become 'unbound' during sleep," adds Payne, explaining
that "unbinding" enables the sleeping brain to selectively preserve
only that information which it calculates to be most salient and worthy
of remembering. A real-world example of this tradeoff, she adds, is the
"weapon focus effect" in which crime victims vividly remember an
assailant's weapon, but have little memory for other important aspects
of the crime scene. Traumatic memories, such as the flashbacks
experienced among individuals with post-traumatic stress disorder, can
demonstrate similar disparities, with some aspects of an experience
seemingly engraved in memory while other details are erased.
"Sleep
is a smart, sophisticated process," adds Payne. "You might say that
sleep is actually working at night to decide what memories to hold on
to and what to let go of."
Sleep Helps to Preserve Emotionally Significant Details in Memory
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