PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Calming fear during sleep

First evidence that fear memories can be reduced during sleep

2013-09-23
(Press-News.org) CHICAGO --- A fear memory was reduced in people by exposing them to the memory over and over again while they slept. It's the first time that emotional memory has been manipulated in humans during sleep, report Northwestern Medicine® scientists.

The finding potentially offers a new way to enhance the typical daytime treatment of phobias through exposure therapy by adding a nighttime component. Exposure therapy is a common treatment for phobia and involves a gradual exposure to the feared object or situation until the fear is extinguished.

"It's a novel finding," said Katherina Hauner, a postdoctoral fellow in neurology at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine. "We showed a small but significant decrease in fear. If it can be extended to pre-existing fear, the bigger picture is that, perhaps, the treatment of phobias can be enhanced during sleep."

Hauner did the research in the lab of Jay Gottfried, associate professor of neurology at Feinberg and senior author of the paper.

The study will be published Sept. 22 in the journal Nature Neuroscience.

Previous projects have shown that spatial learning and motor sequence learning can be enhanced during sleep. It wasn't previously known that emotions could be manipulated during sleep, Northwestern investigators said.

In the study, 15 healthy human subjects received mild electric shocks while seeing two different faces. They also smelled a specific odorant while viewing each face and being shocked, so the face and the odorant both were associated with fear. Subjects received different odorants to smell with each face such as woody, clove, new sneaker, lemon or mint.

Then, when a subject was asleep, one of the two odorants was re-presented, but in the absence of the associated faces and shocks. This occurred during slow wave sleep when memory consolidation is thought to occur. Sleep is very important for strengthening new memories, noted Hauner, also a research scientist at the Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago.

"While this particular odorant was being presented during sleep, it was reactivating the memory of that face over and over again which is similar to the process of fear extinction during exposure therapy," Hauner said.

When the subjects woke up, they were exposed to both faces. When they saw the face linked to the smell they had been exposed to during sleep, their fear reactions were lower than their fear reactions to the other face.

Fear was measured in two ways: through small amounts of sweat in the skin, similar to a lie detector test, and through neuroimaging with fMRI (functional magnetic resonance imaging). The fMRI results showed changes in regions associated with memory, such as the hippocampus, and changes in patterns of brain activity in regions associated with emotion, such as the amygdala. These brain changes reflected a decrease in reactivity that was specific to the targeted face image associated with the odorant presented during sleep.

INFORMATION:

Other Northwestern authors on the paper are James D. Howard and Christina Zelano.

The research was supported by the National Institute of Mental Health grant F32MH091967, the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke grant T32NS047987 and the National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders grants R01DC010014 and R21DC012014, all of the National Institutes of Health. The research also was supported by the Northwestern University Center for Translational Imaging.

NORTHWESTERN NEWS: http://www.northwestern.edu/newscenter/

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

UCLA scientists explain the formation of unusual ring of radiation in space

2013-09-23
Since the discovery of the Van Allen radiation belts in 1958, space scientists have believed these belts encircling the Earth consist of two doughnut-shaped rings of highly charged particles — an inner ring of high-energy electrons and energetic positive ions and an outer ring of high-energy electrons. In February of this year, a team of scientists reported the surprising discovery of a previously unknown third radiation ring — a narrow one that briefly appeared between the inner and outer rings in September 2012 and persisted for a month. In new research, UCLA ...

USC scientists ID protein that regulates cellular trafficking, potential for anti-cancer therapy

2013-09-23
LOS ANGELES — Molecular microbiologists at the University of Southern California (USC) have uncovered intricate regulatory mechanisms within the cell that could lead to novel therapeutics for the treatment of cancer and other diseases. Their findings, which have long-standing significance in the basic understanding of cell biology, appear in the journal Nature Cell Biology. "Our research reveals a new regulatory mechanism that coordinates two distinct intracellular processes that are critical to cellular homeostasis and disease development," said Chengyu Liang, M.D., ...

Scientists closer to universal flu vaccine after pandemic 'natural experiment'

2013-09-23
Scientists have moved closer to developing a universal flu vaccine after using the 2009 pandemic as a natural experiment to study why some people seem to resist severe illness. Researchers at Imperial College London asked volunteers to donate blood samples just as the swine flu pandemic was getting underway and report any symptoms they experienced over the next two flu seasons. They found that those who avoided severe illness had more CD8 T cells, a type of virus-killing immune cell, in their blood at the start of the pandemic. They believe a vaccine that stimulates ...

The brain cannot be fooled by artificial sweeteners

2013-09-23
The results of the new study imply that it is hard to fool the brain by providing it with 'energyless' sweet flavours. Our pleasure in consuming sweet solutions is driven to a great extent by the amount of energy it provides: greater reward in the brain is attributed to sugars compared to artificial sweeteners. Professor Ivan de Araujo, who led the study at Yale University School of Medicine USA, says: "The consumption of high-calorie beverages is a major contributor to weight gain and obesity, even after the introduction of artificial sweeteners to the market. We believe ...

Creating electricity with caged atoms

2013-09-23
A lot of energy is wasted when machines turn hot, unnecessarily heating up their environment. Some of this thermal energy could be harvested using thermoelectric materials; they create electric current when they are used to bridge hot and cold objects. At the Vienna University of Technology (TU Vienna), a new and considerably more efficient class of thermoelectric materials can now be produced. It is the material's very special crystal structure that does the trick, in connection with an astonishing new physical effect; in countless tiny cages within the crystal, cerium ...

Propofol discovery may help lead to development of new anaesthetics

2013-09-23
New research on the most commonly used anaesthetic drug could help to unravel a long-standing mystery about how it induces a pain-free, sleep-like state. General anaesthetics are administered to tens of millions of people every year in hospitals, where they are used to sedate patients undergoing surgery. Despite this, scientists have yet to understand how the drug interacts with its targets in brain cells to achieve this effect. Following years of research on propofol, which has become the most commonly used anaesthetic since it was introduced in the 1980s, researchers ...

Propofol discovery may aid development of new anesthetics

2013-09-23
Researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis and Imperial College London have identified the site where the widely used anesthetic drug propofol binds to receptors in the brain to sedate patients during surgery. Until now, it hasn't been clear how propofol connects with brain cells to induce anesthesia. The researchers believe the findings, reported online in the journal Nature Chemical Biology, eventually will lead to the development of more effective anesthetics with fewer side effects. "For many years, the mechanisms by which anesthetics act ...

Chronic aggressive behavior in boys: Epigenetic sources?

2013-09-23
Chronic aggressive behaviour exhibited by some boys from disadvantaged families may be due to epigenetic changes during pregnancy and early childhood. This is highlighted by two studies conducted by a team led by Richard E. Tremblay, professor emeritus at the University of Montreal and Moshe Szyf, professor at McGill University, published in the journal PLOS ONE. The first author of the two papers, Nadine Provençal, was jointly supervised by professors Szyf and Tremblay. Epigenetic changes possibly related to the prenatal environment In the first study, published in ...

Why do you want to eat the baby?

2013-09-23
What woman has not wanted to gobble up a baby placed in her arms, even if the baby is not hers? This reaction, which everyone has noticed or felt, could have biological underpinnings related to maternal functions. For the first time, an international team of researchers has found evidence of this phenomenon in the neural networks associated with reward. "The olfactory -- thus non-verbal and non-visual -- chemical signals for communication between mother and child are intense," explains Johannes Frasnelli, a postdoctoral researcher and lecturer at the University of Montreal's ...

Functional disability high among newly diagnosed older breast cancer patients

2013-09-23
Many older women with newly diagnosed breast cancer have difficulty accomplishing daily tasks, and African-Americans seem to be disproportionately affected. Those are the findings of a new study published early online in CANCER, a peer-reviewed journal of the American Cancer Society. The study's results suggest that many breast cancer patients could benefit from receiving therapy to improve their physical function. Many studies conducted in older adults have demonstrated that, compared with Caucasians, African-Americans are more likely to experience functional disability, ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

New data on atmosphere from Earth to the edge of space

Self-destructing vaccine offers enhanced protection against tuberculosis in monkeys

Feeding your good gut bacteria through fiber in diet may boost body against infections

Sustainable building components create a good indoor climate

High levels of disordered eating among young people linked to brain differences

Hydrogen peroxide and the mystery of fruit ripening: ‘Signal messengers’ in plants

T cells’ capability to fully prevent acute viral infections opens new avenues for vaccine development

Study suggests that magma composition drives volcanic tremor

Sea surface temperatures and deeper water temperatures reached a new record high in 2024

Connecting through culture: Understanding its relevance in intercultural lingua franca communication

Men more than three times as likely to die from a brain injury, new US study shows

Tongue cancer organoids reveal secrets of chemotherapy resistance

Applications, limitations, and prospects of different muscle atrophy models in sarcopenia and cachexia research

FIFAWC: A dataset with detailed annotation and rich semantics for group activity recognition

Transfer learning-enhanced physics-informed neural network (TLE-PINN): A breakthrough in melt pool prediction for laser melting

Holistic integrative medicine declaration

Hidden transport pathways in graphene confirmed, paving the way for next-generation device innovation

New Neurology® Open Access journal announced

Gaza: 64,000 deaths due to violence between October 2023 and June 2024, analysis suggests

Study by Sylvester, collaborators highlights global trends in risk factors linked to lung cancer deaths

Oil extraction might have triggered small earthquakes in Surrey

Launch of world’s most significant protein study set to usher in new understanding for medicine

New study from Chapman University reveals rapid return of water from ground to atmosphere through plants

World's darkest and clearest skies at risk from industrial megaproject

UC Irvine-led discovery of new skeletal tissue advances regenerative medicine potential

Pulse oximeters infrequently tested by manufacturers on diverse sets of subjects

Press Registration is open for the 2025 AAN Annual Meeting

New book connects eugenics to Big Tech

Electrifying your workout can boost muscles mass, strength, UTEP study finds

Renewed grant will continue UTIA’s integrated pest management program

[Press-News.org] Calming fear during sleep
First evidence that fear memories can be reduced during sleep