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The Impact of Reactivation During Sleep on the Consolidation of Abstract Information in Humans

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University of Pennsylvania

Status

Completed

Conditions

Memory Consolidation

Treatments

Behavioral: Congruent vs. Incongruent
Behavioral: Targeted memory reactivation (TMR)
Behavioral: Immediate vs. Awake vs. Asleep

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
NIH

Identifiers

NCT05746299
1R21MH128788-01A1 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)
833228A

Details and patient eligibility

About

In any given cognitive domain, representations of individual elements are not independent but are organized by means of structured relations. Representations of this underlying structure are powerful, allowing generalization and inference in novel environments. In the semantic domain, structure captures associations between different semantic features or concepts (e.g., green, wings, can fly) and is known to influence the development and deterioration of semantic knowledge. The investigators recently found that humans more easily learn novel categories that contain clusters of reliably co-occurring features, revealing an influence of structure on novel category formation. However, a critical unknown is whether learned representations of structure are closely tied to category-specific elements, or whether such representations become abstract to some extent, transformed away from the experienced features. Further, if abstract structural representations do emerge, prior work provides intriguing hints that these representations may require offline consolidation during awake rest or sleep. The investigators have developed a paradigm in which carefully designed graph structures govern the pattern of feature co-occurrences within individual categories. Here the investigators implement a "structure transfer" extension of this paradigm in order to determine whether learning one structured category facilitates learning of a second identically structured category defined by a new set of features. This facilitation would provide evidence that structure representations are abstract to some degree. Aim 1 will use these methods to evaluate whether abstract structural representations emerge immediately during learning. Aim 2 will determine whether these representations persist, or emerge, over a delay, and whether sleep-based consolidation in particular is needed. The role of replay of recent experience during sleep will be evaluated using electroencephalography (EEG) paired with closed-loop targeted memory reactivation (TMR), a technique that enables causal influence over the consolidation of recently learned information in humans. This work will inform and constrain theories of semantic learning as well as theories of structure learning and representation more broadly.

Enrollment

194 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 35 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Ages between 18 and 35

Exclusion criteria

  • No medical or neurological illness that would impact experimental performance
  • Not a member of a vulnerable population

Trial design

Primary purpose

Basic Science

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

194 participants in 7 patient groups

Immediate Congruent
Experimental group
Description:
Participants will learn and be tested on two different semantic categories with the same structure that dictates the co-occurrence of different features.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Immediate vs. Awake vs. Asleep
Behavioral: Congruent vs. Incongruent
Immediate Incongruent
Experimental group
Description:
Participants will learn and be tested on two different semantic categories with different structures that dictate the co-occurrence of different features.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Immediate vs. Awake vs. Asleep
Behavioral: Congruent vs. Incongruent
Awake Incongruent
Experimental group
Description:
Participants will learn two different semantic categories, neither of which has a Modular structure. After a 2.5-hour break, they will learn and be tested on a novel semantic category with a Modular structure.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Immediate vs. Awake vs. Asleep
Behavioral: Congruent vs. Incongruent
Awake Congruent
Experimental group
Description:
Participants will learn two different semantic categories, one of which has a Modular structure. After a 2.5-hour break, they will learn and be tested on a novel semantic category with a Modular structure.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Immediate vs. Awake vs. Asleep
Behavioral: Congruent vs. Incongruent
Sleep Incongruent
Experimental group
Description:
Participants will learn two different semantic categories, one of which has a Modular structure. After a 2-hour nap opportunity, during which TMR will be used to reactivate the non-Modular category, participants will take a 30-minute break. After the break, they will learn and be tested on a novel semantic category with a Modular structure.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Immediate vs. Awake vs. Asleep
Behavioral: Targeted memory reactivation (TMR)
Behavioral: Congruent vs. Incongruent
Sleep Congruent (SWS)
Experimental group
Description:
Participants will learn two different semantic categories, one of which has a Modular structure. After a 2-hour nap opportunity, during which TMR will be used to reactivate the Modular category during slow wave sleep (SWS), participants will take a 30-minute break. After the break, they will learn and be tested on a novel semantic category with a Modular structure.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Immediate vs. Awake vs. Asleep
Behavioral: Targeted memory reactivation (TMR)
Behavioral: Congruent vs. Incongruent
Sleep Congruent (REM)
Experimental group
Description:
Participants will learn two different semantic categories, one of which has a Modular structure. After a 2-hour nap opportunity, during which TMR will be used to reactivate the Modular category during rapid eye movement (REM) sleep, participants will take a 30-minute break. After the break, they will learn and be tested on a novel semantic category with a Modular structure.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Immediate vs. Awake vs. Asleep
Behavioral: Targeted memory reactivation (TMR)
Behavioral: Congruent vs. Incongruent

Trial documents
3

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Anna C Schapiro, PhD; Sarah H Solomon, PhD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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