Sleep supports episodic memory consolidation, yet it remains unclear how naturalistic post-encoding sleep quality relates to the neural reinstatement of episodic representations across adulthood. The present study examined whether sleep discontinuity during the retention interval predicted delayed context memory and encoding-retrieval similarity (ERS) of EEG in younger and older adults. Participants completed an object-scene context memory task with immediate and delayed retrieval, while EEG was recorded during encoding and retrieval. Actigraphy was used to measure sleep across the post-encoding retention period, and principal component analysis identified sleep discontinuity and sleep time components. Behavioral results showed that greater post-encoding sleep discontinuity, but not sleep time, was associated with poorer delayed memory accuracy for mismatching object-context pairs across age. ERS analyses further showed that greater sleep discontinuity was associated with reduced ERS for correctly rejected mismatching pairs across frontal and posterior spatiotemporal clusters. Age moderated sleep-ERS associations: greater sleep discontinuity was generally related to lower ERS in younger adults, whereas some spatiotemporal clusters showed positive associations in older adults, potentially reflecting compensatory or effortful retrieval-related processing in poorer sleepers. Together, these findings suggest that sleep continuity during the post-encoding retention interval is important for preserving high-fidelity episodic representations needed for later context discrimination. More broadly, the results demonstrate that naturalistic sleep fragmentation is linked to both behavioral memory outcomes and neural reinstatement across adults.
Seraji, M., Mirjalili, S., Nyan, C., Duarte, A., Calhoun, V.
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