Catherine Vien
Université de Montréal
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Publication
Featured researches published by Catherine Vien.
Human Brain Mapping | 2014
Stuart M. Fogel; Geneviève Albouy; Catherine Vien; Romana Popovicci; Bradley R. King; Richard D. Hoge; Saad Jbabdi; Habib Benali; Avi Karni; Pierre Maquet; Julie Carrier; Julien Doyon
Behavioral studies indicate that older adults exhibit normal motor sequence learning (MSL), but paradoxically, show impaired consolidation of the new memory trace. However, the neural and physiological mechanisms underlying this impairment are entirely unknown. Here, we sought to identify, through functional magnetic resonance imaging during MSL and electroencephalographic (EEG) recordings during daytime sleep, the functional correlates and physiological characteristics of this age‐related motor memory deficit. As predicted, older subjects did not exhibit sleep‐dependent gains in performance (i.e., behavioral changes that reflect consolidation) and had reduced sleep spindles compared with young subjects. Brain imaging analyses also revealed that changes in activity across the retention interval in the putamen and related brain regions were associated with sleep spindles. This change in striatal activity was increased in young subjects, but reduced by comparison in older subjects. These findings suggest that the deficit in sleep‐dependent motor memory consolidation in elderly individuals is related to a reduction in sleep spindle oscillations and to an associated decrease of activity in the cortico‐striatal network. Hum Brain Mapp 35:3625–3645, 2014.
PLOS Biology | 2016
Samuel Laventure; Stuart M. Fogel; Ovidiu Lungu; Geneviève Albouy; Pénélope Sévigny-Dupont; Catherine Vien; Chadi Sayour; Julie Carrier; Habib Benali; Julien Doyon
Although numerous studies have convincingly demonstrated that sleep plays a critical role in motor sequence learning (MSL) consolidation, the specific contribution of the different sleep stages in this type of memory consolidation is still contentious. To probe the role of stage 2 non-REM sleep (NREM2) in this process, we used a conditioning protocol in three different groups of participants who either received an odor during initial training on a motor sequence learning task and were re-exposed to this odor during different sleep stages of the post-training night (i.e., NREM2 sleep [Cond-NREM2], REM sleep [Cond-REM], or were not conditioned during learning but exposed to the odor during NREM2 [NoCond]). Results show that the Cond-NREM2 group had significantly higher gains in performance at retest than both the Cond-REM and NoCond groups. Also, only the Cond-NREM2 group yielded significant changes in sleep spindle characteristics during cueing. Finally, we found that a change in frequency of sleep spindles during cued-memory reactivation mediated the relationship between the experimental groups and gains in performance the next day. These findings strongly suggest that cued-memory reactivation during NREM2 sleep triggers an increase in sleep spindle activity that is then related to the consolidation of motor sequence memories.
Neurobiology of Aging | 2017
Stuart M. Fogel; Catherine Vien; Avi Karni; Habib Benali; Julie Carrier; Julien Doyon
Sleep is necessary for the optimal consolidation of procedural learning, and in particular, for motor sequential skills. Motor sequence learning remains intact with age, but sleep-dependent consolidation is impaired, suggesting that memory deficits for procedural skills are specifically impacted by age-related changes in sleep. Age-related changes in spindles may be responsible for impaired motor sequence learning consolidation, but the morphological basis for this deficit is unknown. Here, we found that gray matter in the hippocampus and cerebellum was positively correlated with both sleep spindles and offline improvements in performance in young participants but not in older participants. These results suggest that age-related changes in gray matter in the hippocampus relate to spindles and may underlie age-related deficits in sleep-related motor sequence memory consolidation. In this way, spindles can serve as a biological marker for structural brain changes and the related memory deficits in older adults.
PLOS ONE | 2017
Stuart M. Fogel; Geneviève Albouy; Bradley R. King; Ovidiu Lungu; Catherine Vien; Arnaud Boré; Basile Pinsard; Habib Benali; Julie Carrier; Julien Doyon
Motor memory consolidation is thought to depend on sleep-dependent reactivation of brain areas recruited during learning. However, up to this point, there has been no direct evidence to support this assertion in humans, and the physiological processes supporting such reactivation are unknown. Here, simultaneous electroencephalographic and functional magnetic resonance imaging (EEG-fMRI) recordings were conducted during post-learning sleep to directly investigate the spindle-related reactivation of a memory trace formed during motor sequence learning (MSL), and its relationship to overnight enhancement in performance (reflecting consolidation). We show that brain regions within the striato-cerebello-cortical network recruited during training on the MSL task, and in particular the striatum, were also activated during sleep, time-locked to spindles. Interestingly, the consolidated trace in the striatum was not simply strengthened, but was transformed/reorganized from rostrodorsal (associative) to caudoventral (sensorimotor) subregions. Moreover, the degree of the reactivation was correlated with overnight improvements in performance. Altogether, the present findings demonstrate that striatal reactivation linked to sleep spindles in the post-learning night, is related to motor memory consolidation.
Neurobiology of Aging | 2016
Catherine Vien; Arnaud Boré; Ovidiu Lungu; Habib Benali; Julie Carrier; Stuart M. Fogel; Julien Doyon
Older adults show impaired consolidation in motor sequence learning (MSL) tasks, failing to demonstrate the sleep-dependent performance gains usually seen in young individuals. To date, few studies have investigated the white-matter substrates of MSL in healthy aging, and none have addressed how fiber pathways differences may contribute to the age-related consolidation deficit. Accordingly, we used diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging to explore how white-matter characteristics relate to performance using an explicit MSL task in young and older participants. Analysis revealed that initial learning scores were correlated to white-matter microstructure in the corticospinal tract and within the corpus callosum regardless of age. Furthermore, sleep-dependent consolidation scores, in young adults only, were related to white-matter tract organization in a frontal area where several major fiber bundles cross each other. These findings further our understanding of the neural correlates of MSL in healthy aging and provide the first evidence that age-related white-matter differences in tract configuration may underlie the age-related motor memory consolidation deficit.
Journal of Sleep Research | 2012
Stuart M. Fogel; Geneviève Albouy; Catherine Vien; Brad King; Richard D. Hoge; Saad Jbabdi; Habib Benali; Avi Karni; Pierre Maquet; Julie Carrier; Julien Doyon
Archive | 2014
Stuart M. Fogel; Geneviève Albouy; Brad King; Catherine Vien; Avi Karni; Habib Benali; Pierre Maquet; Julie Carrier; Julien Doyon
Archive | 2016
Samuel Laventure; Stuart M. Fogel; Ovidiu Lungu; Geneviève Albouy; Pénélope Sévigny-Dupont; Catherine Vien; Chadi Sayour; Julie Carrier; Habib Benali; Julien Doyon; Sorbonne Universités
F1000Research | 2014
Catherine Vien; Arnaud Boré; Ovidiu Lungu; Julie Carrier; Stuart M. Fogel; Julien Doyon
Journal of Sleep Research | 2012
F Asselin; Stuart M. Fogel; Geneviève Albouy; Catherine Vien; Brad King; Richard D. Hoge; Saad Jbabdi; Habib Benali; Avi Karni; Pierre Maquet; Julie Carrier; Julien Doyon