AI Article Synopsis

  • This study examines how reactivating memories influences long-term storage, focusing on both conscious and unconscious processes during wakefulness.
  • It involved 41 participants learning adjective-object-position associations, with some memories consciously reactivated and others unconsciously processed.
  • Findings indicate that conscious reactivation can weaken strong related memories, while unconscious reactivation helps integrate weaker memories without impairing others, highlighting the different effects of conscious versus unconscious memory processes.

Article Abstract

Consolidating memories for long-term storage depends on reactivation. Reactivation occurs both consciously, during wakefulness, and unconsciously, during wakefulness and sleep. While considerable work has examined conscious awake and unconscious sleep reactivation, in this study, we directly compare the consequences of conscious and unconscious reactivation during wakefulness. Forty-one participants learned associations consisting of adjective-object-position triads. Objects were clustered into distinct semantic groups (e.g., fruits, vehicles) such that we could examine consequences of reactivation on semantically related memories. After an intensive learning protocol, we systematically reactivated some of the triads by presenting the adjective as a cue. Reactivation was done so that it was consciously experienced for some triads, and only unconsciously processed for others. Memory for spatial positions, the most distal part of the association, was affected by reactivation in a consciousness-dependent and memory-strength-dependent manner. Conscious reactivation resulted in weakening of semantically related memories that were strong initially, resonating with prior findings of retrieval-induced forgetting. Unconscious reactivation, on the other hand, selectively benefited weak reactivated memories, as previously shown for reactivation during sleep. Semantically linked memories were not impaired, but rather were integrated with the reactivated memory. These results taken together demonstrate that conscious and unconscious reactivation have qualitatively different consequences. Results support a consciousness-dependent inhibition account, whereby unconscious reactivation entails less inhibition than conscious reactivation, thus allowing more liberal spread of activation. Findings set the stage for additional exploration into the role of conscious experience in memory storage and structuring.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10927514PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2313604121DOI Listing

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