These findings reinforce the researchers' hypothesis that sleep
is needed to clear the brain’s short-term memory storage and make
room for new information, said Walker, who presented his preliminary
findings on Sunday, Feb. 21, at the annual meeting of the American
Association of the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in San Diego,
Calif.
Since 2007, Walker and other sleep researchers have established that fact-based memories are temporarily stored in the hippocampus before being sent to the brain's prefrontal cortex, which may have more storage space.
"It's as though the e-mail inbox in your hippocampus is
full and, until you sleep and clear out those fact
e-mails, you’re
not going to receive any more mail. It's just going
to bounce until you sleep and move it into another
folder," Walker said.
In the latest study, Walker and his team have broken new ground
in discovering that this memory-refreshing process occurs when nappers
are engaged in a specific stage of sleep. Electroencephalogram tests,
which measure electrical activity in the brain, indicated that this
refreshing of memory capacity is related to Stage 2 non-REM sleep,
which takes place between deep sleep (non-REM) and the dream state
known as Rapid Eye Movement (REM). Previously, the purpose of this
stage was unclear, but the new results offer evidence as to why humans
spend at least half their sleeping hours in Stage 2, non-REM, Walker
said.
"I can’t imagine Mother Nature would have us spend 50 percent
of the night going from one sleep stage to another for
no reason," Walker said. "Sleep is sophisticated. It
acts locally to give us what we need."
Walker and his team will go on to investigate whether the reduction of sleep experienced by people as they get older is related to the documented decrease in our ability to learn as we age. Finding that link may be helpful in understanding such neurodegenerative conditions as Alzheimer’s disease, Walker said.
In addition to Walker, co-investigators of these new findings are UC Berkeley post-doctoral fellow Bryce A. Mander and psychology undergraduate Sangeetha Santhanam.