Detalles del Artículo
Detalles del Artículo

< Ant.
Sig. >
 
Título Artículo Minimizing interference with early consolidation boosts 7-day retention in amnesic patientsArtículo de Revista
Parte de Neuropsychology
Vol. 28 n. 5 (Sep. 2014)
Pagina(s) 667-684
Autor(es) Della Sala, Sergio (Autor)
Dewar, Michaela (Autor)
Alber, Jessica (Autor)
Idioma Inglés;
Resumen Objective: A short wakeful rest immediately after learning boosts memory retention in amnesic patients over several minutes. Here we investigated whether a short wakeful rest could boost memory retention in amnesic patients over a much longer period. Method: The authors tested 15 patients with amnesia associated with amnestic mild cognitive impairment (MCI)/mild Alzheimer¿s disease (AD) and 15 age- and-education-matched controls. All participants learned 2 prose passages, 1 followed by a 10-min wakeful rest (minimal sensory stimulation), and the other by a 10-min visual spot the difference game. Participants were given a surprise delayed recall test for both prose passages after 15¿30 min and after 7 days. Results: Wakeful resting boosted memory substantially in the patients over 15¿30 min and 7 days: After 7 days all 15 patients retained >30% of the prose that had been learned prior to wakeful resting. In contrast, after 7 days, only 4 patients retained >30% of the prose that had been learned prior to playing the spot the difference game. Conclusions: This striking 7-day memory boost via wakeful resting is remarkable, given that amnesic patients often struggle to remember new information over just a few minutes. Our novel findings indicate that there is substantial capacity for longer-term retention in patients with amnestic MCI/mild AD, and bolster the hypothesis that wakeful resting boosts memory by protecting the compromised memory consolidation system from interfering incoming information.