Abstract

Newly encoded memories are stabilized over time through a process or a set of processes termed consolidation, which happens preferentially during sleep. However, not all memories profit equally from this offline stabilization. Previous research suggested that one factor, which determines whether a memory will benefit from sleep consolidation, is future relevance. The aim of our current study was to replicate these findings and expand them to investigate their neural underpinnings.In our experiment, 38 participants learned two sets of object-location associations. The two sets of stimuli were presented to each participant intermixed and in random order. After study, participants performed a baseline retention test and were thereafter instructed that, after a delay containing sleep, they would be tested and rewarded only on one of the two sets of stimuli. This relevance instruction was revoked, however, immediately before the test. Thus, this manipulation affected memory consolidation while having no influence on encoding and retrieval. This retention interval was monitored via actigraphy recordings.While the study session was purely behavioral, the test session was conducted in an MRI scanner, thus we collected neuroimaging data at retrieval of relevant compared with non-relevant items.Behaviorally, we found no effect of the relevance manipulation on memory retention, confidence rating, or reaction time. At a neural level, no effect of relevance on memory retrieval-related brain operations was observed. Contrary to our expectations, the relevance manipulation did not result in improved consolidation, nor in improved subsequent performance at retrieval. These findings challenge previously published results and suggest that future relevance as manipulated here may not be sufficient to produce enhanced memory consolidation.

Highlights

  • Each day, we encounter a multitude of new facts and make new experiences

  • The present study is the first to explore the effect of future relevance on memory consolidation during sleep using functional magnetic resonance imaging

  • The hippocampus is not necessary for the maintenance of remote memories. This is demonstrated by lesion data, which illustrate a temporal gradient of retrograde amnesia following hippocampal lesion, where the more remote a memory, the more likely it is spared from amnesia (Scoville and Milner, 1957; Kapur and Brooks, 1999)

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Summary

Introduction

We encounter a multitude of new facts and make new experiences. only a select few of these events will be remembered days after they occurred. The present study is the first to explore the effect of future relevance on memory consolidation during sleep using functional magnetic resonance imaging. This technique al­ lows us to investigate the neural underpinnings of the observed effect of future relevance on the consolidation process. The process or set of processes, through which newly encoded memories are stabilized over time is termed ‘systems consolidation’ During this pro­ cess, memories are thought to become increasingly independent of the hippocampus and increasingly dependent on neocortical representa­ tions potentially bound together by medial prefrontal nodes (Frankland and Bontempi, 2005; Takashima et al, 2006)

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