2019
DOI: 10.3389/fnagi.2019.00058
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Young and Older Adults Benefit From Sleep, but Not From Active Wakefulness for Memory Consolidation of What-Where-When Naturalistic Events

Abstract: An extensive psychological literature shows that sleep actively promotes human episodic memory (EM) consolidation in younger adults. However, evidence for the benefit of sleep for EM consolidation in aging is still elusive. In addition, most of the previous studies used EM assessments that are very different from everyday life conditions and are far from considering all the hallmarks of this memory system. In this study, the effect of an extended period of sleep was compared to the effect of an extended period… Show more

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Cited by 16 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…Recent evidence also suggests that memories with richer contextual cues (e.g. “what,” “where,” “when” details) may also be protected against age-related declines in sleep consolidation [ 27 ]. Given that the timely execution of intentions necessarily depends on the successful use of environmental and temporal information, we sought to examine whether prospective memory consolidation would be preserved with aging.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Recent evidence also suggests that memories with richer contextual cues (e.g. “what,” “where,” “when” details) may also be protected against age-related declines in sleep consolidation [ 27 ]. Given that the timely execution of intentions necessarily depends on the successful use of environmental and temporal information, we sought to examine whether prospective memory consolidation would be preserved with aging.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The participants were asked “to navigate” in a virtual city in order to go to the train station, following a defined path indicated by yellow arrows. This paradigm was inspired from previous studies conducted in aging ( Abichou et al, 2019 , 2020 ). They were told to pay attention to several situations encountered during their navigation and were asked to judge them according to what most people would think about these situations.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This study used a "medium" difficulty version of this task, assessing 16 unique itemlocation-time combinations. Notably, performance on related WWW integrated episodic memory tasks have been shown to be sensitive to behavioural (e.g., sleep) and psychological (e.g., emotional) interventions among young adults (Abichou et al, 2019;Zlomuzica et al, 2016). Relatedly, performance on word-list memory tasks has also been shown to be sensitive to behavioural interventions (e.g., fist clenching, saccadic eye movements) in young adults (Loprinzi, Crawford, et al, 2020).…”
Section: Memory Assessmentmentioning
confidence: 99%