Hacking your memory with sleep Sleeping with Science a TED series

Transcriber: TED Translators admin
Reviewer: Krystian Aparta

Whether you’re cramming for an exam

or trying to learn
a new musical instrument

or even trying to perfect a new sport,

sleep may actually be
your secret memory weapon.

[Sleeping with Science]

Studies have actually told us
that sleep is critical for memory

in at least three different ways.

First, we know that you need
sleep before learning

to actually get your brain ready,

almost like a dry sponge,

ready to initially soak up
new information.

And without sleep, the memory
circuits within the brain

effectively become
waterlogged, as it were,

and we can’t absorb new information.

We can’t effectively lay down
those new memory traces.

But it’s not only important
that you sleep before learning,

because we also know
that you need sleep after learning

to essentially hit the save button
on those new memories

so that we don’t forget.

In fact, sleep will actually
future-proof that information

within the brain,

cementing those memories

into the architecture
of those neural networks.

And we’ve begun to discover

exactly how sleep achieves
this memory-consolidation benefit.

The first mechanism
is a file-transfer process.

And here, we can speak about
two different structures

within the brain.

The first is called the hippocampus

and the hippocampus
sits on the left and the right side

of your brain.

And you can think of the hippocampus

almost like the informational
inbox of your brain.

It’s very good at receiving
new memory files

and holding onto them.

The second structure
that we can speak about

is called the cortex.

This wrinkled massive tissue
that sits on top of your brain.

And during deep sleep,

there is this file-transfer mechanism.

Think of the hippocampus like a USB stick

and your cortex like the hard drive.

And during the day, we’re going around

and we’re gathering lots of files,

but then during deep sleep at night,

because of that limited storage capacity,

we have to transfer those files
from the hippocampus

over to the hard drive
of the brain, the cortex.

And that’s exactly one of the mechanisms

that deep sleep seems to provide.

But there’s another mechanism
that we’ve become aware of

that helps cement
those memories into the brain.

And it’s called replay.

Several years ago,

scientists were looking
at how rats learned

as they would run around a maze.

And they were recording the activity
in the memory centers of these rats.

And as the rat was running
around the maze,

different brain cells would code
different parts of the maze.

And so if you added a tone
to each one of the brain cells

what you would hear
as the rat was starting to learn the maze

was the signature of that memory.

So it would sound a little bit like …

(Bouncy piano music)

It was this signature of learning
that we could hear.

But then they did something clever.

They kept listening to the brain
as these rats fell asleep,

and what they heard was remarkable.

The rat, as it was sleeping,

started to replay
that same memory signature.

But now it started to replay it
almost 10 times faster

than it was doing when it was awake.

So now instead you would start to hear …

(Fast bouncy piano music)

That seems to be the second way

in which sleep can actually
strengthen these memories.

Sleep is actually replaying
and scoring those memories

into a new circuit within the brain,

strengthening that memory representation.

The final way in which sleep
is beneficial for memory

is integration and association.

In fact, we’re now learning that sleep

is much more intelligent
than we ever imagined.

Sleep doesn’t just simply
strengthen individual memories,

sleep will actually cleverly interconnect
new memories together.

And as a consequence,

you can wake up the next day

with a revised mind-wide
web of associations,

we can come up with solutions
to previously impenetrable problems.

And this is probably the reason

that you’ve never been told
to stay awake on a problem.

Instead, you’re told
to sleep on a problem,

and that’s exactly
what the science teaching us.

抄写员:TED Translators admin
审稿人:Krystian

Aparta 无论您是为了考试而死记硬背,

还是尝试
学习新乐器

,甚至尝试完善一项新运动,

睡眠实际上可能是
您的秘密记忆武器。

[与科学一起睡觉]

研究实际上告诉我们
,睡眠

至少以三种不同的方式对记忆至关重要。

首先,我们知道你需要
睡眠

才能真正让你的大脑做好准备,

就像一块干海绵一样,

准备好最初吸收
新信息。

没有睡眠,
大脑内的记忆回路

实际上
会被淹没

,我们无法吸收新信息。

我们无法有效地放下
那些新的记忆痕迹。

但是,
在学习之前睡觉不仅很重要,

因为我们也知道
,在学习之后你需要睡觉

才能基本上
按下这些新记忆的保存按钮,

这样我们就不会忘记。

事实上,睡眠实际上会在
未来证明

大脑中的信息,

将这些记忆巩固


这些神经网络的架构中。

我们已经开始确切地发现

睡眠是如何实现
这种记忆巩固的好处的。

第一种机制
是文件传输过程。

在这里,我们可以谈论

大脑中的两种不同结构。

第一个称为海马体

,海马体
位于大脑的左右两侧

你可以把海马体想象

成你大脑的信息收件箱。

它非常擅长接收
新的内存文件

并保留它们。

我们可以谈论

的第二种结构称为皮质。

这个皱巴巴的大块
组织位于你的大脑顶部。

在深度睡眠期间,

有这种文件传输机制。

将海马体想象成 U 盘

,将大脑皮层想象成硬盘。

白天,我们四处走动

,收集大量文件,

但在晚上深度睡眠时,

由于存储容量有限,

我们必须将这些文件
从海马体

传输到硬盘驱动器
大脑,皮层。

正是深度睡眠似乎提供的机制之一。

但是我们已经意识到另一种机制

可以帮助将
这些记忆巩固到大脑中。

它被称为重放。

几年前,

科学家们正在
研究老鼠是如何

在迷宫中奔跑时学习的。

他们正在记录
这些老鼠记忆中心的活动。

当老鼠在迷宫中奔跑时

不同的脑细胞会编码
迷宫的不同部分。

因此,如果你
给每个脑细胞添加一个音调,

当老鼠开始学习迷宫时你会听到什么,迷宫

就是那个记忆的标志。

所以听起来有点像……

(弹力钢琴音乐)

我们可以听到这种学习的签名

但后来他们做了一些聪明的事情。

当这些老鼠睡着时

,他们一直在听大脑的声音,他们听到的声音是非凡的。

老鼠在睡觉时

开始
重播同样的记忆特征。

但现在它开始重播它的
速度几乎

是清醒时的 10 倍。

所以现在你会开始听到……

(快速有弹性的钢琴音乐)

这似乎是

睡眠实际上可以
加强这些记忆的第二种方式。

睡眠实际上是在大脑内将
这些记忆重放和评分,

形成一个新的回路,

加强记忆表征。

睡眠对记忆有益的最后一种方式

是整合和联想。

事实上,我们现在了解到睡眠

比我们想象的要聪明得多。

睡眠不只是简单地
加强个人记忆,

睡眠实际上会巧妙地将
新的记忆连接在一起。

因此,

您可以在第二天醒来时看到

一个经过修改的全脑
关联网络,

我们可以
为以前难以理解的问题提出解决方案。

这可能

就是你从来没有被告知
要在一个问题上保持清醒的原因。

相反,你被告知
要解决一个问题,

而这
正是科学教给我们的。