Memory consolidation during sleep does not benefit all memories equally. Initial encoding strength appears to play a role in governing where sleep effects are seen, but it is unclear whether sleep preferentially consolidates weaker or stronger memories. We manipulated encoding strength along two dimensions - the number of item presentations, and success at visualizing each item, in a sample of 82 participants. Sleep benefited memory of successfully visualized items only. Within these, the sleep-wake difference was largest for more weakly encoded information. These results suggest that the benefit of sleep on memory is seen most clearly for items that are encoded to a lower initial strength.
CITATION STYLE
Denis, D., Schapiro, A. C., Poskanzer, C., Bursal, V., Charon, L., Morgan, A., & Stickgold, R. (2020). The roles of item exposure and visualization success in the consolidation of memories across wake and sleep. Learning and Memory, 27(11), 451–456. https://doi.org/10.1101/LM.051383.120
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