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Review
. 2015 Mar:50:103-19.
doi: 10.1016/j.neubiorev.2014.09.020. Epub 2014 Oct 7.

Sleep and memory in mammals, birds and invertebrates

Affiliations
Free article
Review

Sleep and memory in mammals, birds and invertebrates

Albrecht P Vorster et al. Neurosci Biobehav Rev. 2015 Mar.
Free article

Abstract

Sleep supports memory consolidation. Based on studies in mammals, sleep-dependent consolidation has been conceptualized as 'active system consolidation'. During waking, information is encoded into an initial store (hippocampus). During subsequent sleep, some of the newly encoded memories are selected to be reactivated and redistributed toward networks serving as long-term store (e.g., neocortex), whereby memories become transformed into more general, schema-like representations. Here we asked whether sleep in non-mammalian species might play a comparable role for memory. The literature review revealed that sleep produces enhancing effects on memory in all non-mammalian species studied. Furthermore, across species some of the hallmarking features of active system consolidation were identified: Studies of filial imprinting in chicks suggest that a redistribution of imprinting memory toward long-term storage sites occurs during sleep; song learning in birds appears to be driven by reactivations of song representations during sleep; studies of bees demonstrated the selectivity of sleep-dependent consolidation, benefiting extinction but not original classical conditioning. Although overall fragmentary, first evidence in non-mammalian species suggests active system consolidation might be an evolutionary conserved function of sleep.

Keywords: Active system consolidation; Bird; Invertebrate; Learning; Mammal; Memory; Sleep.

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