Targeted reactivation during sleep differentially affects negative memories in socially anxious and healthy children and adolescents

Sabine Groch, Andrea Preiss, Dana L. McMakin, Björn Rasch, Susanne Walitza, Reto Huber, Ines Wilhelm*

*Corresponding author for this work
12 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Cognitive models propose a negative memory bias as one key factor contributing to the emergence and maintenance of social anxiety disorder (SAD). The long-term consolidation of memories relies on memory reactivations during sleep. We investigated in SAD patients and healthy controls the role of memory reactivations during sleep in the long-term consolidation of positive and negative information. Socially anxious and healthy children and adolescents learnt associations between pictures showing ambiguous situations and positive or negative words defining the situations’ outcome. Half of the words were re-presented during postlearning sleep (i.e., they were cued). Recall of picture–word associations and subjective ratings of pleasantness and arousal in response to the pictures was tested for cued and uncued stimuli. In the morning after cueing, cueing facilitated retention of positive and negative memories equally well in SAD patients and healthy controls. One week later, cueing led to reduced ratings of pleasantness of negative information in SAD but not in healthy controls. Coincidental to these findings was more pronounced EEG theta activity over frontal, temporal and parietal regions in response to negative stimuli in SAD patients. Our findings suggest that the preferential abstraction of negative emotional information during sleep might represent one factor underlying the negative memory bias in SAD.

Original languageEnglish
JournalJournal of Neuroscience
Volume37
Issue number9
Pages (from-to)2425-2434
Number of pages10
ISSN0270-6474
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 01.03.2017

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