Skip to ContentSkip to Navigation
University of Groningenfounded in 1614  -  top 100 university
About us Latest news News News articles

Behavioral and molecular consequenses of sleep deprivation

03 December 2010

PhD ceremony: Ms. R. Hagewoud, 13.15 uur, Academiegebouw, Broerstraat 5, Groningen

Thesis: Behavioral and molecular consequenses of sleep deprivation

Promotor(s): prof. J.M. Koolhaas

Faculty: Mathematics and Natural Sciences

 

Roelina Hagewoud studied the behavioral and molecular consequences of sleep deprivation. Sleep loss is a serious problem in our society. An important consequence of sleep deprivation is that it can have a negative effect on memory. The major aim of Hagewoud’s thesis was to investigate the effects of sleep deprivation on the different stages involved in memory processing and to assess the underlying mechanisms in the brain. The findings of her thesis show that acute, relatively short sleep deprivation can have a negative effect on the encoding, consolidation and adaptation of a memory and on the behavioural performance in a learning task. Importantly,the disruption of memory processes by sleep deprivation is not mediated by waking interference by sensory stimulation or stress hormones during waking, but actually seems to be related to the amount of lost sleep. Especially memory for learning tasks that are dependent on the hippocampus, an important brain area involved in memory processing, is sensitive to sleep deprivation. Deprivation of sleep following learning induces in the hippocampus a reduction in the expression of activated CREB, a protein that is critically involved in memory formation.

The most important finding of Hagewoud is that the effect of sleep deprivation may not always be directly evident on the level of behavioral performance, since the brain, when possible, can temporarily compensate for the negative effects by promoting the use of alternative learning mechanisms and brain areas involved that seem to be less sensitive to sleep deprivation. However, the effects of sleep deprivation can still appear later, long after the actual sleep loss, because the use of alternative learning mechanisms can result in reduced flexibility under changing conditions that require adaptation of the previously formed memory.

 

Last modified:13 March 2020 01.14 a.m.
Share this Facebook LinkedIn
View this page in: Nederlands

More news

  • 10 September 2025

    Funding for Feringa and Minnaard from National Growth Fund project Big Chemistry

    Two UG research projects have received funding from the National Growth Fund project Big Chemistry via NWO.

  • 09 September 2025

    The carbon cycle as Earth’s thermostat

    Earth's natural carbon cycle becomes unbalanced if we, humans, continue to release extra carbon dioxide (CO2) into the atmosphere. In this overview article about the carbon cycle, you can find out how Earth generally keeps itself in balance and how...

  • 09 September 2025

    Carbon dioxide’s fingerprint

    In the year 2000, Harro Meijer, Professor of Isotope Physics at the University of Groningen, set up the Lutjewad Measurement Station near Hornhuizen. There, researchers from Groningen are mapping where CO2 in the atmosphere originates and where it...