The influence of encoding strategy on associative memory consolidation across wake and sleep

  1. Jessica D. Payne5
  1. 1Department of Psychology, University of York, York YO10 5DD, United Kingdom
  2. 2Institute for Graduate Clinical Psychology, Widener University, Chester, Pennsylvania 19013, USA
  3. 3Center for Sleep and Cognition, Psychiatry Department, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston, Massachusetts 02215, USA
  4. 4Division of Sleep Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02215, USA
  5. 5Department of Psychology, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, Indiana 46556, USA
  1. Corresponding author: dan.denis{at}york.ac.uk

Abstract

Sleep benefits memory consolidation. However, factors present at initial encoding may moderate this effect. Here, we examined the role that encoding strategy plays in subsequent memory consolidation during sleep. Eighty-nine participants encoded pairs of words using two different strategies. Each participant encoded half of the word pairs using an integrative visualization technique, where the two items were imagined in an integrated scene. The other half were encoded nonintegratively, with each word pair item visualized separately. Memory was tested before and after a period of nocturnal sleep (N = 47) or daytime wake (N = 42) via cued recall tests. Immediate memory performance was significantly better for word pairs encoded using the integrative strategy compared with the nonintegrative strategy (P < 0.001). When looking at the change in recall across the delay, there was significantly less forgetting of integrated word pairs across a night of sleep compared with a day spent awake (P < 0.001), with no significant difference in the nonintegrated pairs (P = 0.19). This finding was driven by more forgetting of integrated compared with not-integrated pairs across the wake delay (P < 0.001), whereas forgetting was equivalent across the sleep delay (P = 0.26). Together, these results show that the strategy engaged in during encoding impacts both the immediate retention of memories and their subsequent consolidation across sleep and wake intervals.

Footnotes

  • Received March 21, 2023.
  • Accepted July 19, 2023.

This article, published in Learning & Memory, is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution 4.0 International), as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.

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