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Overnight memory consolidation facilitates rather than interferes with new learning of similar materials - a study probing NMDA-receptors

Asfestani M Alizadeh, E Braganza, J Schwidetzky, J Santiago, S Soekadar, J Born, GB Feld
doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/206771
Asfestani M Alizadeh
1University of Tübingen, Institute of Medical Psychology and Behavioural Neurobiology
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E Braganza
1University of Tübingen, Institute of Medical Psychology and Behavioural Neurobiology
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J Schwidetzky
1University of Tübingen, Institute of Medical Psychology and Behavioural Neurobiology
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J Santiago
1University of Tübingen, Institute of Medical Psychology and Behavioural Neurobiology
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S Soekadar
2University of Tübingen, Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy
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J Born
1University of Tübingen, Institute of Medical Psychology and Behavioural Neurobiology
3University of Tübingen, Center for Integrative Neuroscience
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GB Feld
1University of Tübingen, Institute of Medical Psychology and Behavioural Neurobiology
4University College London, Division of Psychology and Language Sciences
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Abstract

Whereas sleep-dependent consolidation and its neurochemical underpinnings have been strongly researched, less is known about how consolidation during sleep affects subsequent learning. Since sleep enhances memory, it can be expected to pro-actively interfere with learning after sleep, in particular of similar materials. This pro-active interference should be enhanced by substances that benefit consolidation during sleep, such as D-cycloserine. We tested this hypothesis in two groups (Sleep, Wake) of young healthy participants receiving on one occasion D-cycloserine (175 mg) and on another occasion placebo, according to a double-blind balanced cross-over design. Treatment was administered after participants had learned a set of word-pairs (A-B list) and before nocturnal retention periods of sleep vs. wakefulness. After D-cycloserine blood plasma levels had dropped to negligible amounts, i.e., the next day in the evening, participants learned, in three sequential runs, new sets of word-pairs. One list – to enhance interference – consisted of the same cue words as the original set paired with a new target word (A-C list) and the other of completely new cue words (D-E set). Unexpectedly, during post-retention learning the A-C interference list was generally better learned than the completely new D-E list, which suggests that consolidation of previously encoded similar material enhances memory integration rather than pro-active interference. Consistent with this view, new learning of word-pairs was better after sleep than wakefulness. Similarly, D-cycloserine generally enhanced learning of new word-pairs, compared to placebo. This effect being independent of sleep or wakefulness, leads us to speculate that D-cycloserine, in addition to enhancing sleep-dependent consolidation, might mediate a time-dependent process of active forgetting.

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Posted October 20, 2017.
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Overnight memory consolidation facilitates rather than interferes with new learning of similar materials - a study probing NMDA-receptors
Asfestani M Alizadeh, E Braganza, J Schwidetzky, J Santiago, S Soekadar, J Born, GB Feld
bioRxiv 206771; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/206771
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Overnight memory consolidation facilitates rather than interferes with new learning of similar materials - a study probing NMDA-receptors
Asfestani M Alizadeh, E Braganza, J Schwidetzky, J Santiago, S Soekadar, J Born, GB Feld
bioRxiv 206771; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/206771

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