“…Thus, we hypothesize that sleep selectively enhances recollection (Atienza & Cantero, 2008;Daurat et al, 2007;Drosopoulos et al, 2005; but see Groch, Wilhelm, Diekelmann, & Born, 2013). As previous findings indicate that familiaritybased recognition and priming do not rely on the hippocampus (Wang, Ranganath, & Yonelinas, 2014; but see Mayes et al, 2019;Merkow, Burke, & Kahana, 2015), we assume that these memory processes (often referred to as 'non-episodic memory'; see e.g., de Vanssay-Maigne et al, 2011;Eldridge, Knowlton, Furmanski, Bookheimer, & Engel, 2000;Rasch, Papassotiropoulos, & de Quervain, 2010) are not enhanced across sleep. As such, we assume that sleep enhances explicit recollection-based memory without affecting implicit memory (Casey et al, 2016;Giganti et al, 2014; but see Plihal & Born, 1999).…”