Multi-region processing during sleep for memory and cognition.

Proc Jpn Acad Ser B Phys Biol Sci

Laboratory for Sleeping-Brain Dynamics, Research Center for Idling Brain Science, University of Toyama, Toyama, Japan.

Published: March 2025

Over the past decades, the understanding of sleep has evolved to be a fundamental physiological mechanism integral to the processing of different types of memory rather than just being a passive brain state. The cyclic sleep substates, namely, rapid eye movement (REM) sleep and non-REM (NREM) sleep, exhibit distinct yet complementary oscillatory patterns that form inter-regional networks between different brain regions crucial to learning, memory consolidation, and memory retrieval. Technical advancements in imaging and manipulation approaches have provided deeper understanding of memory formation processes on multi-scales including brain-wide, synaptic, and molecular levels. The present review provides a short background and outlines the current state of research and future perspectives in understanding the role of sleep and its substates in memory processing from both humans and rodents, with a focus on cross-regional brain communication, oscillation coupling, offline reactivations, and engram studies. Moreover, we briefly discuss how sleep contributes to other higher-order cognitive functions.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.2183/pjab.101.008DOI Listing

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