Effects of Random Visual and Auditory Stimulation on Walking of Healthy Adults

Author(s):  
Jieun park ◽  
Euna Kim ◽  
Sungmin Yang ◽  
Nahyun Lee ◽  
Minhye Ha ◽  
...  
SLEEP ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 43 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. A45-A45
Author(s):  
B Baxter ◽  
K Kwok ◽  
C Talbot ◽  
L Zhu ◽  
D Mylonas ◽  
...  

Abstract Introduction Converging evidence supports the hypothesis that reduced sleep spindles and spindle-slow oscillation (SO) coordination contribute to cognitive deficits in schizophrenia. Closed-loop auditory stimulation in healthy adults increases sleep spindles and improves declarative memory consolidation. Here we investigated whether closed-loop auditory stimulation also improves sleep-dependent procedural memory consolidation as a first step towards an intervention in schizophrenia. Methods Thirteen healthy adults participated in two nap sessions (stimulation or detection only) with polysomnography in a counterbalanced order. Participants were trained on the finger tapping Motor Sequence Task (MST), which measures sleep-dependent motor procedural memory consolidation, prior to napping and were tested after awakening. We detected the negative peak of SOs during non-REM sleep and, in the stimulation condition, delivered 50ms of pink noise during the SO up-state. Results Auditory stimulation increased SOs and spindles during the SO up-state in a frontocentral cluster of electrodes 800-1200ms after stimulation compared to detection only (p<0.05). Stimulation also showed promise for improving memory consolidation (33% increase in MST overnap improvement from detection-only) but this did not reach significance in this small sample and data collection is ongoing. Conclusion Auditory stimulation evoked coordinated spindle-SO events that mediate memory consolidation, but more subjects are needed to evaluate whether it also improves memory. If it does, we will test the effects of stimulation on sleep-dependent memory deficits in patients with schizophrenia. Closed-loop auditory stimulation shows promise as a safe, scalable intervention for cognitive deficits that can be implemented at home with commercially available devices. Support R01 MH67720 (DSM & RS), NIH-NHLBI 5T32HL007901-17 (BB), K24MH099421 (DSM), and Simons Foundation (DSM).


2002 ◽  
Vol 18 (1) ◽  
pp. 63-77 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anastasia Efklides ◽  
Efterpi Yiultsi ◽  
Theopisti Kangellidou ◽  
Fotini Kounti ◽  
Fotini Dina ◽  
...  

Summary: The Wechsler Memory Scale (WMS) is a laboratory-based memory test that has been criticized for its lack of ecological validity and for not testing long-term memory. A more recent memory test, which aims at testing everyday memory, is the Rivermead Behavioral Memory Test (RBMT); it tests prospective memory and other forms of memory not tapped by WMS. However, even this test does not capture all aspects of everyday memory problems often reported by adults. These problems are the object of the Everyday Memory Questionnaire (EMQ). This study aimed at identifying the relationships between these three memory tests. The differential effect of Alzheimer's disease (AD) on the above relationships was also studied. The sample consisted of 233 healthy adults (20 to 75+ years of age) and 39 AD patients (50 to 75 years of age). Confirmatory factor analysis revealed the following latent factors: Verbal Memory, Visual Reconstruction, Orientation, Message (action embedded in spatial context), Visual Recognition, Spatial Memory, New Learning/Association Forming, Prospective/Episodic Memory, and Metamemory. These first-order factors were further explained by two second-order factors: Semantic Memory and Coordination of Semantic and Visuo-Spatial Memory. This basic structure was preserved in the sample of AD patients, although AD patients performed less well on the WMS and the RBMT. Some interesting findings regarding semantic memory, face recognition, and metamemory in AD patients are also reported. Age, education, but no gender effects on memory performance were also detected.


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