Understanding changes in sleep and memory in healthy aging is critical to prevention and treatment of diseases of aging including Alzheimer?s disease. Deficits in sleep are observed early in Alzheimer?s disease and may even precede Alzheimer?s disease onset. Decreased cognitive abilities and a parallel decline in sleep quantity and quality are observed even in healthy aging. Given a wealth of research in healthy young adults and animal models illustrating a benefit of sleep on memory and other cognitive processes, the overarching objective of this proposal is to understand whether changes in sleep account for changes in cognitive abilities in healthy aging. The specific objective of this application is to understand factors underlying preserved and deficient sleep-dependent memory consolidation in older adults. Specifically, studies will examine whether age- related changes in sleep-dependent memory processing reflect changes in sleep physiology, memory encoding, or both. Sleep?s function on declarative and procedural learning is unique, each being associated with distinct sleep stages and physiological markers. Therefore, declarative and procedural learning will be probed seperately.
Specific Aim 1 will examine whether age-related changes in memory encoding contribute to sleep-dependent declarative memory consolidation. Both behavioral and neural measures of memory encoding will be examined. It is hypothesized that reduced hippocampal engagement and depth of encoding compared to young adults underlies reduced but preserved sleep-dependent memory processing in older adults. The secondary aim is to examine sleep microstructure associated with age-related changes in memory consolidation.
Specific Aim 2 will examine whether age-related changes in memory encoding contribute to reduced sleep-dependent procedural memory consolidation. It is hypothesized that older adults fail to engage the hippocampus at encoding of such tasks, a necessary state for sleep-dependent memory consolidation to occur. However, additional training is hypothesized to yield sleep-dependent performance benefits in older adults. The proposed research is innovative as it applies a novel concept to the field of cognitive aging, refines the approach to studies of sleep-dependent memory consolidation (accounting for encoding capacity), utilizes novel techniques for this field (high-depensity polysomnography, fMRI), and seeks to shift the treatment and preventive strategies for Alzheimer?s disease and aging to sleep targets. Moreover, the proposed work is significant as it will inform approaches to Alzheimer?s disease prevention and treatment: if individual differences in memory encoding or sleep microstructure reduce sleep-dependent memory processing, these may be targets for delaying onset of Alzheimer?s disease symptoms and other forms of cognitive decline.

Public Health Relevance

The proposed research is relevant to public health because understanding the sleep-memory relationship in healthy aging underlies the development of novel treatments of Alzheimer?s disease and other forms of age- related cognitive decline. Thus, this research is well-suited to the NIH mission, seeking fundamental knowledge of sleep and memory in older adults in order to enhance health and reduce the burden of cognitive decline including Alzheimer?s disease. !

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute on Aging (NIA)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01AG040133-08
Application #
9884697
Study Section
Cognition and Perception Study Section (CP)
Program Officer
Mackiewicz, Miroslaw
Project Start
2018-07-15
Project End
2023-03-31
Budget Start
2020-06-01
Budget End
2021-03-31
Support Year
8
Fiscal Year
2020
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Massachusetts Amherst
Department
Psychology
Type
Schools of Arts and Sciences
DUNS #
153926712
City
Hadley
State
MA
Country
United States
Zip Code
01035
Jones, Bethany J; Mackay, Alix; Mantua, Janna et al. (2018) The role of sleep in emotional memory processing in middle age. Neurobiol Learn Mem 155:208-215
Mantua, Janna; Spencer, Rebecca M C (2017) Exploring the nap paradox: are mid-day sleep bouts a friend or foe? Sleep Med 37:88-97
Mantua, Janna; Henry, Owen S; Garskovas, Nolan F et al. (2017) Mild Traumatic Brain Injury Chronically Impairs Sleep- and Wake-Dependent Emotional Processing. Sleep 40:
Kurdziel, Laura B F; Mantua, Janna; Spencer, Rebecca M C (2017) Novel word learning in older adults: A role for sleep? Brain Lang 167:106-113
Bottary, Ryan; Sonni, Akshata; Wright, David et al. (2016) Insufficient chunk concatenation may underlie changes in sleep-dependent consolidation of motor sequence learning in older adults. Learn Mem 23:455-9
Kurdziel, Laura B F; Spencer, Rebecca M C (2016) Consolidation of novel word learning in native English-speaking adults. Memory 24:471-81
Mantua, Janna; Baran, Bengi; Spencer, Rebecca M C (2016) Sleep benefits consolidation of visuo-motor adaptation learning in older adults. Exp Brain Res 234:587-95
Jones, Bethany J; Schultz, Kurt S; Adams, Sydney et al. (2016) Emotional bias of sleep-dependent processing shifts from negative to positive with aging. Neurobiol Aging 45:178-189
Baran, Bengi; Mantua, Janna; Spencer, Rebecca M C (2016) Age-related Changes in the Sleep-dependent Reorganization of Declarative Memories. J Cogn Neurosci 28:792-802
Mantua, Janna; Spencer, Rebecca M C (2015) The interactive effects of nocturnal sleep and daytime naps in relation to serum C-reactive protein. Sleep Med 16:1213-6

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