Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5045347 | Neuropsychologia | 2017 | 10 Pages |
â¢Age-related decline was found in sleep-based memory consolidation (SBC).â¢Older adults had impaired SBC effect on declarative memory.â¢Older adults had relatively preserved SBC effect on procedural memory.â¢The age-related changes of SBC are mostly derived from sleep condition.â¢Older adults' SBC effect is moderated by their sleep efficiency.
A period of post-learning sleep benefits memory consolidation compared with an equal-length wake interval. However, whether this sleep-based memory consolidation changes as a function of age remains controversial. Here we report a meta-analysis that investigates the age differences in the sleep-based memory consolidation in two types of memory: declarative memory and procedural memory. The meta-analysis included 22 comparisons of the performance between young adults (N =640) and older adults (N =529) on behavioral tasks measuring sleep-based memory consolidation. Our results showed a significant overall sleep-based beneficial effect in young adults but not in older adults. However, further analyses suggested that the age differences were mainly manifested in sleep-based declarative memory consolidation but not in procedural memory consolidation. We discussed the possible underlying mechanisms for the age-related degradation in sleep-based memory consolidation. Further research is needed to determine the crucial components for sleep-related memory consolidation in older adults such as age-related changes in neurobiological and cardiovascular functions, which may play an important role in this context and have the potential to delineate the interrelationships between age-related changes in sleep and memory.