Hacking your memory -- with sleep | Sleeping with Science, a TED series

303,192 views ・ 2020-09-02

TED


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Transcriber: TED Translators admin Reviewer: Krystian Aparta
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Whether you're cramming for an exam
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or trying to learn a new musical instrument
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or even trying to perfect a new sport,
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sleep may actually be your secret memory weapon.
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[Sleeping with Science]
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Studies have actually told us that sleep is critical for memory
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in at least three different ways.
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First, we know that you need sleep before learning
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to actually get your brain ready,
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almost like a dry sponge,
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ready to initially soak up new information.
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And without sleep, the memory circuits within the brain
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effectively become waterlogged, as it were,
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and we can't absorb new information.
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We can't effectively lay down those new memory traces.
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But it's not only important that you sleep before learning,
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because we also know that you need sleep after learning
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to essentially hit the save button on those new memories
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so that we don't forget.
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In fact, sleep will actually future-proof that information
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within the brain,
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cementing those memories
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into the architecture of those neural networks.
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And we've begun to discover
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exactly how sleep achieves this memory-consolidation benefit.
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The first mechanism is a file-transfer process.
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And here, we can speak about two different structures
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within the brain.
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The first is called the hippocampus
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and the hippocampus sits on the left and the right side
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of your brain.
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And you can think of the hippocampus
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almost like the informational inbox of your brain.
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It's very good at receiving new memory files
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and holding onto them.
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The second structure that we can speak about
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is called the cortex.
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This wrinkled massive tissue that sits on top of your brain.
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And during deep sleep,
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there is this file-transfer mechanism.
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Think of the hippocampus like a USB stick
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and your cortex like the hard drive.
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And during the day, we're going around
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and we're gathering lots of files,
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but then during deep sleep at night,
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because of that limited storage capacity,
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we have to transfer those files from the hippocampus
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over to the hard drive of the brain, the cortex.
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And that's exactly one of the mechanisms
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that deep sleep seems to provide.
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But there's another mechanism that we've become aware of
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that helps cement those memories into the brain.
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And it's called replay.
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Several years ago,
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scientists were looking at how rats learned
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as they would run around a maze.
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And they were recording the activity in the memory centers of these rats.
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And as the rat was running around the maze,
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different brain cells would code different parts of the maze.
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And so if you added a tone to each one of the brain cells
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what you would hear as the rat was starting to learn the maze
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was the signature of that memory.
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So it would sound a little bit like ...
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(Bouncy piano music)
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It was this signature of learning that we could hear.
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But then they did something clever.
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They kept listening to the brain as these rats fell asleep,
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and what they heard was remarkable.
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The rat, as it was sleeping,
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started to replay that same memory signature.
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But now it started to replay it almost 10 times faster
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than it was doing when it was awake.
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So now instead you would start to hear ...
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(Fast bouncy piano music)
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That seems to be the second way
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in which sleep can actually strengthen these memories.
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Sleep is actually replaying and scoring those memories
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into a new circuit within the brain,
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strengthening that memory representation.
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The final way in which sleep is beneficial for memory
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is integration and association.
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In fact, we're now learning that sleep
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is much more intelligent than we ever imagined.
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Sleep doesn't just simply strengthen individual memories,
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sleep will actually cleverly interconnect new memories together.
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And as a consequence,
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you can wake up the next day
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with a revised mind-wide web of associations,
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we can come up with solutions to previously impenetrable problems.
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And this is probably the reason
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that you've never been told to stay awake on a problem.
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Instead, you're told to sleep on a problem,
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and that's exactly what the science teaching us.
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