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Assessing the dream-lag effect for REM and NREM stage 2 dreams.

TLDR
Results provide evidence for a 7-day sleep-dependent non-linear memory consolidation process that is specific to REM sleep, and accord with proposals for the importance of REM sleep to emotional memory consolidation.
Abstract
This study investigates evidence, from dream reports, for memory consolidation during sleep. It is well-known that events and memories from waking life can be incorporated into dreams. These incorporations can be a literal replication of what occurred in waking life, or, more often, they can be partial or indirect. Two types of temporal relationship have been found to characterize the time of occurrence of a daytime event and the reappearance or incorporation of its features in a dream. These temporal relationships are referred to as the day-residue or immediate incorporation effect, where there is the reappearance of features from events occurring on the immediately preceding day, and the dream-lag effect, where there is the reappearance of features from events occurring 5–7 days prior to the dream. Previous work on the dream-lag effect has used spontaneous home recalled dream reports, which can be from Rapid Eye Movement Sleep (REM) and from non-Rapid Eye Movement Sleep (NREM). This study addresses whether the dream-lag effect occurs only for REM sleep dreams, or for both REM and NREM stage 2 (N2) dreams. 20 participants kept a daily diary for over a week before sleeping in the sleep laboratory for 2 nights. REM and N2 dreams collected in the laboratory were transcribed and each participant rated the level of correspondence between every dream report and every diary record. The dream-lag effect was found for REM but not N2 dreams. Further analysis indicated that this result was not due to N2 dream reports being shorter, in terms of number of words, than the REM dream reports. These results provide evidence for a 7-day sleep-dependent non-linear memory consolidation process that is specific to REM sleep, and accord with proposals for the importance of REM sleep to emotional memory consolidation.

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Calreticulin signaling in health and disease.

TL;DR: The role of calreticulin outside of the endoplasmic reticulum is also extensive, including functions in wound healing and immunity, which has important implications in health and disease.
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Exploiting Knowledge on Leishmania Drug Resistance to Support the Quest for New Drugs.

TL;DR: The utility and the impact of associating drug resistance (DR) studies to drug discovery pipelines are discussed and experimental DR should be generated to promising compounds at an early stage of their development, to further optimize them and monitor clinical trials.
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α-Synuclein expression is modulated at the translational level by iron.

TL;DR: It is shown that the amount of polysome-associated endogenous human &agr;-synuclein mRNA decreases in presence of deferoxamine, and this result not only supports a role for iron in the translational control of &agre;- Synuclein expression, but also suggests that iron chelation may be a valid approach to control &agR;- synuclein levels in the brain.
Journal ArticleDOI

Such stuff as dreams are made on? Elaborative encoding, the ancient art of memory, and the hippocampus

TL;DR: This article argues that rapid eye movement (REM) dreaming is elaborative encoding for episodic memories, and that the stuff of dreams is thestuff of memory if this hypothesis is correct.
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Metaphor and hyperassociativity: the imagination mechanisms behind emotion assimilation in sleep and dreaming.

TL;DR: It is proposed that emotions act as a marker for information to be selectively processed during sleep, including consolidation into long term memory structures and integration into pre-existing memory networks; that dreaming reflects these emotion assimilation processes.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Sleep-dependent memory consolidation

TL;DR: Converging evidence, from the molecular to the phenomenological, leaves little doubt that offline memory reprocessing during sleep is an important component of how the authors' memories are formed and ultimately shaped.
Journal ArticleDOI

Dissociable stages of human memory consolidation and reconsolidation

TL;DR: The unique contributions of wake and sleep in the development of different forms of consolidation are described, and it is shown that waking reactivation can turn a previously consolidated memory back into a labile state requiring subsequent reconsolidation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Overnight therapy? The role of sleep in emotional brain processing.

TL;DR: A rapid eye movement (REM) sleep hypothesis of emotional-memory processing is proposed, the implications of which may provide brain-based insights into the association between sleep abnormalities and the initiation and maintenance of mood disturbances.
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