Biasing the content of hippocampal replay during sleep
Author(s)
Bender, Daniel A.; Wilson, Matthew A.
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The hippocampus plays an essential role in encoding self-experienced events into memory. During sleep, neural activity in the hippocampus related to a recent experience has been observed to spontaneously reoccur, and this “replay” has been postulated to be important for memory consolidation. Task-related cues can enhance memory consolidation when presented during a post-training sleep session, and if memories are consolidated by hippocampal replay, a specific enhancement for this replay should also be observed. To test this, we have trained rats on an auditory-spatial association task, while recording from neuronal ensembles in the hippocampus. Here we report that during sleep, a task-related auditory cue biases reactivation events towards replaying the spatial memory associated with that cue. These results indicate that sleep replay can be manipulated by external stimulation, and provide further evidence for the role of hippocampal replay in memory consolidation.
Date issued
2012-10Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences; Picower Institute for Learning and MemoryJournal
Nature Neuroscience
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
Citation
Bendor, Daniel and Matthew A. Wilson. "Biasing the content of hippocampal replay during sleep." Nat Neurosci. 2012 October ; 15(10): 1439–1444.
Version: Author's final manuscript
ISSN
1097-6256
1546-1726