Cognitive and neural mechanisms underlying memory generalization during wakefulness and sleep
Katja Kleespies – Hector RCD Awardee Monika Schönauer
The human brain has the remarkable ability to flexibly generalize knowledge from specific learning experiences to new situations. However, the mechanisms underlying such generalization processes are still not fully understood. This project aims at characterizing the cognitive and neural representations that underlie successful generalization processes and to identify factors that influence them (e.g., sleep). As such, we hope to gain a better understanding of how we make sense of the continuously changing world around us.
Memory that is adaptive for future use not only requires adequate storage of the specific experiences one has encountered but, in addition, depends on integration and generalization across these experiences. It has been suggested that there is a trade-off between the ability to remember specific details of an experience and the ability to form integrated and generalized memory representations. However, existing research lacks successful experimental manipulations of the level of generalization to directly test this relationship.
Theoretical work on memory formation and consolidation have identified two factors that are thought to be especially influential in driving generalization (1) presentation of new exemplars in an interleaved manner with exemplars that are already stored in memory and (2) reprocessing of learned exemplars during subsequent sleep.
By testing these two factors, this project aims at obtaining an integrative understanding of the cognitive and neural mechanisms that enable generalization. As such, both cognitive and neural representations, including neural plasticity processes, will be characterized. Furthermore, the interaction between generalization processes initiated during wakefulness and subsequent sleep will be tested to answer the open question whether sleep affects generalization processes especially if they have not been initiated successfully during learning.
Investigating cognitive and neural mechanisms underlying memory generalization during wakefulness and sleep
Katja Kleespies
University of FreiburgSupervised by
Monika Schönauer
Psychology, Medicine & InformaticsHector RCD Awardee since 2021