Authors
Martin Sjøgård, Bryan Baxter, Dimitrios Mylonas, Megan Thompson, Kristi Kwok, Bailey Driscoll, Anabella Tolosa, Wen Shi, Robert Stickgold, Mark Vangel, Catherine J Chu, Dara S Manoach
Published in
Nature communications. Volume 16. Issue 1. Pages 6089. Jul 02, 2025. Epub Jul 02, 2025.
Abstract
Critical aspects of motor learning and memory happen offline, during both wake and sleep. When healthy young people learn a motor sequence task, most of their performance improvement happens not while typing, but offline, during interleaved rest breaks. In contrast, the performance of patients with dense amnesia due to hippocampal damage actually gets worse over the rest breaks and improves while typing. These findings indicate that an intact hippocampus is necessary for offline motor learning during wake, but do not specify its mechanism. Here, we studied epilepsy patients (n = 17) undergoing direct intracranial electroencephalographic monitoring of the hippocampus as they learned the same motor sequence task. Like healthy young people, they show greater speed gains across rest breaks than while typing. They also show higher hippocampal ripple rates during these rest breaks that predict offline gains in speed. This suggests that motor learning during brief rest breaks during wake is mediated by hippocampal ripples. These results expand our understanding of the role of hippocampal ripples beyond declarative memory to include enhancing motor procedural memory.
PMID:
40603846
Bibliographic data and abstract were imported from PubMed on 03 Jul 2025.
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