System consolidation of memory during sleep
University of Tübingen · University of Lübeck
Abstract
Over the past two decades, research has accumulated compelling evidence that sleep supports the formation of long-term memory. The standard two-stage memory model that has been originally elaborated for declarative memory assumes that new memories are transiently encoded into a temporary store (represented by the hippocampus in the declarative memory system) before they are gradually transferred into a long-term store (mainly represented by the neocortex), or are forgotten. Based on this model, we propose that sleep, as an offline mode of brain processing, serves the 'active system consolidation' of memory, i.e. the process in which newly encoded memory representations become redistributed to other neuron…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 9.23
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 90
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Consolidation (business)
- Sleep (system call)
- Memory consolidation
- Psychology
- Business
- Computer science
- Neuroscience
- Accounting