Bernhard Staresina
PhD
Professor of Cognitive Neuroscience
- Tutorial Fellow, Wadham College
Episodic Memory and Sleep
Research Summary
How do brief experiences turn into lasting memories? My work focuses on the neural mechanisms supporting episodic memory in humans. I am interested in how medial temporal lobe (MTL) regions and their oscillatory dynamics contribute to successful encoding, consolidation and recollection of experiences. The research in my group combines electrophysiological recordings (intracranial and scalp EEG, MEG), functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI @ 3T and 7T), behavioural testing and experimental brain stimulation.
Neurophysiology of sleep and memory consolidation
We use high-density scalp EEG, intracranial EEG in epilepsy patients and simultaneous EEG-fMRI to understand the mechanisms of systems consolidation. What are the exact roles of cortical slow oscillations (SOs), thalamocortical spindles and hippocampal ripples during non-REM sleep? What types of memories benefit the most from the precise interaction of these oscillations? How is offline reactivation and replay coordinated in the human brain? Can we bolster memory consolidation via experimental brain stimulation (transcranial electrical stimulation, targeted memory reactivation, closed loop stimulation)?
Functional neuroanatomy of episodic memory
We use standard (3T) and high-field (7T) functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) as well as direct intracranial recordings from the human hippocampus to understand the division of labour within the MTL in service of episodic memory. What are the roles of the hippocampus and the entorhinal cortex (EC) beyond spatial navigation? Where does domain-specificity seen in MTL cortex turn to domain-generality seen in hippocampus? How does our memory system rapidly switch between encoding and retrieval states?
Key publications
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Coupled sleep rhythms for memory consolidation
Journal article
Staresina BP., (2024), Trends in Cognitive Sciences
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Hierarchical nesting of slow oscillations, spindles and ripples in the human hippocampus during sleep.
Journal article
Staresina B. et al, (2015)
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Endogenous memory reactivation during sleep in humans is clocked by slow oscillation-spindle complexes
Journal article
Staresina B. et al, (2021), Nature Communications
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A Neural Chronometry of Memory Recall.
Journal article
Staresina BP. and Wimber M., (2019), Trends Cogn Sci, 23, 1071 - 1085
Recent publications
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Coupled sleep rhythms for memory consolidation
Journal article
Staresina BP., (2024), Trends in Cognitive Sciences
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Ripple-locked coactivity of stimulus-specific neurons and human associative memory.
Journal article
Kunz L. et al, (2024), Nat Neurosci, 27, 587 - 599
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Respiration modulates sleep oscillations and memory reactivation in humans.
Journal article
Schreiner T. et al, (2023), Nat Commun, 14
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Hippocampal neurons code individual episodic memories in humans.
Journal article
Kolibius LD. et al, (2023), Nat Hum Behav, 7, 1968 - 1979
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Better late than never: sleep still supports memory consolidation after prolonged periods of wakefulness.
Journal article
Petzka M. et al, (2023), Learn Mem, 30, 245 - 249