The effects of shared, depression-specific, and anxiety-specific internalizing symptoms on negative and neutral episodic memories following post-learning sleep.

IF 2.5 3区 医学 Q2 BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES Cognitive Affective & Behavioral Neuroscience Pub Date : 2024-08-13 DOI:10.3758/s13415-024-01209-5
Xinran Niu, Mia F Utayde, Kristin E G Sanders, Tony J Cunningham, Guangjian Zhang, Elizabeth A Kensinger, Jessica D Payne
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Abstract

Emotional memory bias is a common characteristic of internalizing symptomatology and is enhanced during sleep. The current study employs bifactor S-1 modeling to disentangle depression-specific anhedonia, anxiety-specific anxious arousal, and the common internalizing factor, general distress, and test whether these internalizing symptoms interact with sleep to influence memory for emotional and neutral information. Healthy adults (N = 281) encoded scenes featuring either negative objects (e.g., a vicious looking snake) or neutral objects (e.g., a chipmunk) placed on neutral backgrounds (e.g., an outdoor scene). After a 12-hour period of daytime wakefulness (n = 140) or nocturnal sleep (n = 141), participants judged whether objects and backgrounds were the same, similar, or new compared with what they viewed during encoding. Participants also completed the mini version of the Mood and Anxiety Symptom Questionnaire. Higher anxious arousal predicted worse memory across all stimuli features, but only after a day spent being awake-not following a night of sleep. No significant effects were found for general distress and anhedonia in either the sleep or wake condition. In this study, internalizing symptoms were not associated with enhanced emotional memory. Instead, memory performance specifically in individuals with higher anxious arousal was impaired overall, regardless of emotional valence, but this was only the case when the retention interval spanned wakefulness (i.e., not when it spanned sleep). This suggests that sleep may confer a protective effect on general memory impairments associated with anxiety.

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共同的、抑郁特异性和焦虑特异性内化症状对学习后睡眠中负面和中性外显记忆的影响。
情绪记忆偏差是内化症状的一个共同特征,并在睡眠中得到增强。本研究采用双因素S-1模型来区分抑郁特异性失乐症、焦虑特异性焦虑唤醒和常见的内化因素--一般苦恼,并检验这些内化症状是否与睡眠相互作用,从而影响对情绪和中性信息的记忆。健康成年人(N = 281)会对场景进行编码,这些场景包括放置在中性背景(如户外场景)上的消极物体(如一条凶恶的蛇)或中性物体(如一只花栗鼠)。经过 12 小时的白天清醒(n = 140)或夜间睡眠(n = 141)后,参与者判断物体和背景与他们在编码时所看到的是相同、相似还是新的。参与者还填写了迷你版的情绪和焦虑症状问卷。焦虑唤醒程度越高,对所有刺激特征的记忆效果越差,但这只是在一天清醒之后的结果,而不是在一夜睡眠之后的结果。在睡眠或清醒状态下,一般痛苦和失乐症均无明显影响。在这项研究中,内化症状与情绪记忆的增强无关。相反,无论情绪价值如何,焦虑唤醒程度较高的个体的记忆表现总体上会受到影响,但只有当保持间隔跨越清醒状态时(即跨越睡眠状态时)才会出现这种情况。这表明,睡眠可能会对与焦虑相关的一般记忆损伤产生保护作用。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.00
自引率
3.40%
发文量
64
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Cognitive, Affective, & Behavioral Neuroscience (CABN) offers theoretical, review, and primary research articles on behavior and brain processes in humans. Coverage includes normal function as well as patients with injuries or processes that influence brain function: neurological disorders, including both healthy and disordered aging; and psychiatric disorders such as schizophrenia and depression. CABN is the leading vehicle for strongly psychologically motivated studies of brain–behavior relationships, through the presentation of papers that integrate psychological theory and the conduct and interpretation of the neuroscientific data. The range of topics includes perception, attention, memory, language, problem solving, reasoning, and decision-making; emotional processes, motivation, reward prediction, and affective states; and individual differences in relevant domains, including personality. Cognitive, Affective, & Behavioral Neuroscience is a publication of the Psychonomic Society.
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