Post-reactivation new learning impairs and updates human episodic memory through dissociable processes

2018 
Learning of competing information after reactivation has the potential to disrupt memory reconsolidation and thus impair a consolidated memory. Yet this effect has rarely been detected in episodic memory. By introducing an additional retrieving cue to the target memory, the current study detected significant impairment on the reactivated episodic memory, in addition to an integration of new information to the old memory. However, while the integration effect followed the time window of reconsolidation disruption, the impairment effect did not. MEG measurements further revealed alpha power change during reactivation and post-reactivation learning which showed different correlation patterns with the integration and impairment effects, confirming that the two effects relied on different processes. Therefore, post-reactivation new learning disrupts episodic memory but not through reconsolidation disruption. Further findings that the impairment effect was correlated with participants’ voluntary inhibition ability suggest an inhibition-based memory updating process underlying post-reactivation new learning.
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