Sleep, circadian rhythms, and cognitive function · 2017. 4. 29. · Sleep, circadian rhythms, and...

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Rebecca M. C. Spencer, PhD Associate Professor of

Psychological & Brain Sciences

Sleep, circadian rhythms, and cognitive function

Disclosures Current funding:

• University of Massachusetts • National Institutes of Health

National Heart, Lung & Blood Institute (NIH R01 HL111695) National Institute on Aging (NIH R01 AG040133)

Other financial relationships:

• Past funding from: Avery Dennison, Jawbone

Conflicts of interest:

• National Institute on Aging and University of Massachusetts funds contributed directly to the work presented in this talk.

Z-sc

ore

Sle

ep E

ffici

ency

Total Sleep Tim

e

Age Age

Sleep impairments are prevalent in normal aging

Cognitive impairments (e.g., long-term memory, executive functions) are prevalent as well

Significance

Sleep Cognition

Significance

Sleep impairments are prevalent in normal aging

Cognitive impairments (e.g., long-term memory, executive functions) are prevalent as well

Parallel trajectories with aging and evidence from young adults suggest that age-related changes in sleep and cognition may be related

If so, sleep may be a target for improving cognitive function in older adults.

Chronotype changes with age

10-17a 19-31b 30-49c 59-79d

Age (yrs)

60

50

40

30

20

10

0

60

50

40

30

20

10

0

Perc

ent e

veni

ng-ty

pe

Perc

ent m

orni

ng-ty

pe

State-of-the-art knowledge

Shift in chronotype affects performance

State-of-the-art knowledge

0 6 12 18 0 6 12 18 0

0 6 12 18 0 6 12 18 0

Young adult

Older adult

Ale

rtne

ss

Ale

rtne

ss Peak alertness:

Reaction time

Inhibitory control

Working memory

Recognition memory

Performance is more equated when individuals are tested at their preferred time with respect to chronotype (see Schmidt et al., 2007)

Sleep also contributes to cognitive performance

State-of-the-art knowledge

0 6 12 18 0 6 12 18 0

0 6 12 18 0 6 12 18 0

Young adult

Older adult

decay

decay

consolidate

?

Sleep benefits cognition in young adults

State-of-the-art knowledge

WAKE

SLEEP

Sleep benefits cognition in young adults

State-of-the-art knowledge

50

55

60

65

70

75

80

Wake Sleep

prepost

Accu

racy

(%)

Sleep benefits cognition in young adults

State-of-the-art knowledge

Correlations between slow wave sleep (SWS) and change in declarative memory over sleep

Parahippocampal gyrus activity

during SWS

40

60

80

100

5 15 25 35

SWS (%)

Rec

all a

ccur

acy

(%)

Declarative memories

State-of-the-art knowledge

Mood regulation and emotional processing

State-of-the-art knowledge

Procedural/skill memories

State-of-the-art knowledge

Sleep contributes to cognitive performance

State-of-the-art knowledge

0 6 12 18 6 12 18 0

0 6 12 18 0 12 18 0

Young adult

Older adult

REM

N1

N2

SWS

REM

N1

N2

SWS

decay

decay

consolidate

?

Do changes in sleep change the function of sleep on cognition?

Is sleep-dependent cognitive processing reduced with age?

State-of-the-art knowledge

…it depends

Declarative/ SWS-dependent

Procedural/ n2-dependent

Emotional/ REM-dependent

% o

f stu

dies

absent

reduced

preserved

n=7 n=13 n=2

Consolidation of declarative memories largely preserved

Consolidation of procedural memories Is reduced

Consolidation of positive memories is preserved negative memories is absent

Knowledge gaps

What underlies changes in sleep’s benefit on memory? Changes in a sleep stage? Neural basis of storage?

What activities of daily living benefit from sleep in older adults? Decision-making? Temporal judgments (scheduling, remembering lists)?

What are the implications of the deficit in procedural memory consolidation?

Research opportunities

How does the quality of sleep stages change with aging?

What is the relationship between the changes in circadian rhythms and sleep (and sleep stages)?

Would an intervention to improve sleep (CBT, nap intervention) improve cognitive processing?

Cognition & Action Lab Cognition & Action Lab

Thank you.

rspencer@umass.edu

Is sleep-dependent cognitive processing reduced with age?

State-of-the-art knowledge

Absent Reduced Spared

Declarative

Procedural

Emotional

5 17 10 22 20 2 8

11 16 7

9 9

1 3 6 12 13 14 15 18 19 21

neg pos

…it depends

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