Modifying Memories During Sleep

Researchers create a link between a location and a reward in sleeping mice.

Written byAnna Azvolinsky
| 3 min read

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KARIM BENCHENANE, GAETAN DE LAVILLEON, MARIE LACROIX, CNRSMice can recall artificial memories created during sleep once they’re awake, researchers from the French National Center for Scientific Research (CNRS) and their colleagues reported today (March 9) in Nature Neuroscience. The findings support a causal role between the firing of specialized neurons called place cells and the ability of these neurons to represent a particular location in space. Place cells, part of the brain’s “inner GPS,” were first discovered by John O’Keefe, who last year shared the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.

“This was a fantastic, well-thought-out idea that, miraculously, worked,” said neuroscientist György Buzsáki of the New York University Neuroscience Institute who was not involved with the work. “The study shows that the emotional value of a particular [location] can be modified, and, what is most critical, is that this can happen in a subconscious, sleep state.”

Karim Benchenane, a neuroscience researcher at CNRS and ESPCI-ParisTech and his colleagues first identified a single place cell in the hippocampus of each mouse that fired when the animal was in a specific location and measured the average time each mouse spent in that location prior to any manipulation.

Then, when that particular place cell became spontaneously active during either an awake or sleep state, an automatic stimulation of ...

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    Anna Azvolinsky received a PhD in molecular biology in November 2008 from Princeton University. Her graduate research focused on a genome-wide analyses of genomic integrity and DNA replication. She did a one-year post-doctoral fellowship at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York City and then left academia to pursue science writing. She has been a freelance science writer since 2012, based in New York City.

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