Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Marion Kuhn is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Marion Kuhn.


Sleep Medicine Reviews | 2014

The reorganisation of memory during sleep

Nina Landmann; Marion Kuhn; Hannah Piosczyk; Bernd Feige; Chiara Baglioni; Kai Spiegelhalder; Lukas Frase; Dieter Riemann; Annette Sterr; Christoph Nissen

Sleep after learning promotes the quantitative strengthening of new memories. Less is known about the impact of sleep on the qualitative reorganisation of memory, which is the focus of this review. Studies have shown that, in the declarative system, sleep facilitates the abstraction of rules (schema formation), the integration of knowledge into existing schemas (schema integration) and creativity that requires the disbandment of existing patterns (schema disintegration). Schema formation and integration might primarily benefit from slow wave sleep, whereas the disintegration of a schema might be facilitated by rapid eye movement sleep. In the procedural system, sleep fosters the reorganisation of motor memory. The neural mechanisms of these processes remain to be determined. Notably, emotions have been shown to modulate the sleep-related reorganisation of memories. In the final section of this review, we propose that the sleep-related reorganisation of memories might be particularly relevant for mental disorders. Thus, sleep disruptions might contribute to disturbed memory reorganisation and to the development of mental disorders. Therefore, sleep-related interventions might modulate the reorganisation of memories and provide new inroads into treatment.


Neurobiology of Learning and Memory | 2015

REM sleep and memory reorganization: Potential relevance for psychiatry and psychotherapy

Nina Landmann; Marion Kuhn; Jonathan-Gabriel Maier; Kai Spiegelhalder; Chiara Baglioni; Lukas Frase; Dieter Riemann; Annette Sterr; Christoph Nissen

Sleep can foster the reorganization of memory, i.e. the emergence of new memory content that has not directly been encoded. Current neurophysiological and behavioral evidence can be integrated into a model positing that REM sleep particularly promotes the disintegration of existing schemas and their recombination in the form of associative thinking, creativity and the shaping of emotional memory. Particularly, REM sleep related dreaming might represent a mentation correlate for the reconfiguration of memory. In a final section, the potential relevance for psychiatry and psychotherapy is discussed.


Nature Communications | 2016

Sleep recalibrates homeostatic and associative synaptic plasticity in the human cortex

Marion Kuhn; Elias Wolf; Jonathan G. Maier; F Mainberger; Bernd Feige; Hanna Schmid; Jan Bürklin; Sarah Maywald; Volker Mall; N Jung; Janine Reis; Kai Spiegelhalder; Stefan Klöppel; Annette Sterr; Anne Eckert; Dieter Riemann; Claus Normann; Christoph Nissen

Sleep is ubiquitous in animals and humans, but its function remains to be further determined. The synaptic homeostasis hypothesis of sleep–wake regulation proposes a homeostatic increase in net synaptic strength and cortical excitability along with decreased inducibility of associative synaptic long-term potentiation (LTP) due to saturation after sleep deprivation. Here we use electrophysiological, behavioural and molecular indices to non-invasively study net synaptic strength and LTP-like plasticity in humans after sleep and sleep deprivation. We demonstrate indices of increased net synaptic strength (TMS intensity to elicit a predefined amplitude of motor-evoked potential and EEG theta activity) and decreased LTP-like plasticity (paired associative stimulation induced change in motor-evoked potential and memory formation) after sleep deprivation. Changes in plasma BDNF are identified as a potential mechanism. Our study indicates that sleep recalibrates homeostatic and associative synaptic plasticity, believed to be the neural basis for adaptive behaviour, in humans.


Neuropsychopharmacology | 2016

State-Dependent Partial Occlusion of Cortical LTP-Like Plasticity in Major Depression.

Marion Kuhn; F Mainberger; Bernd Feige; Jonathan G. Maier; Volker Mall; Nicolai H Jung; Janine Reis; Stefan Klöppel; Claus Normann; Christoph Nissen

The synaptic plasticity hypothesis of major depressive disorder (MDD) posits that alterations in synaptic plasticity represent a final common pathway underlying the clinical symptoms of the disorder. This study tested the hypotheses that patients with MDD show an attenuation of cortical synaptic long-term potentiation (LTP)-like plasticity in comparison with healthy controls, and that this attenuation recovers after remission. Cortical synaptic LTP-like plasticity was measured using a transcranial magnetic stimulation protocol, ie, paired associative stimulation (PAS), in 27 in-patients with MDD according to ICD-10 criteria and 27 sex- and age-matched healthy controls. The amplitude of motor-evoked potentials was measured before and after PAS. Patients were assessed during the acute episode and at follow-up to determine the state- or trait-character of LTP-like changes. LTP-like plasticity, the PAS-induced increase in motor-evoked potential amplitudes, was significantly attenuated in patients with an acute episode of MDD compared with healthy controls. Patients with remission showed a restoration of synaptic plasticity, whereas the deficits persisted in patients without remission, indicative for a state-character of impaired LTP-like plasticity. The results provide first evidence for a state-dependent partial occlusion of cortical LTP-like plasticity in MDD. This further identifies impaired LTP-like plasticity as a potential pathomechanism and treatment target of the disorder.


Sleep Medicine Reviews | 2016

Synaptic plasticity model of therapeutic sleep deprivation in major depression.

Elias Wolf; Marion Kuhn; Claus Normann; F Mainberger; Jonathan G. Maier; Sarah Maywald; Aliza Bredl; Stefan Klöppel; Knut Biber; Dietrich van Calker; Dieter Riemann; Annette Sterr; Christoph Nissen

Therapeutic sleep deprivation (SD) is a rapid acting treatment for major depressive disorder (MDD). Within hours, SD leads to a dramatic decrease in depressive symptoms in 50-60% of patients with MDD. Scientifically, therapeutic SD presents a unique paradigm to study the neurobiology of MDD. Yet, up to now, the neurobiological basis of the antidepressant effect, which is most likely different from todays first-line treatments, is not sufficiently understood. This article puts the idea forward that sleep/wake-dependent shifts in synaptic plasticity, i.e., the neural basis of adaptive network function and behavior, represent a critical mechanism of therapeutic SD in MDD. Particularly, this article centers on two major hypotheses of MDD and sleep, the synaptic plasticity hypothesis of MDD and the synaptic homeostasis hypothesis of sleep-wake regulation, and on how they can be integrated into a novel synaptic plasticity model of therapeutic SD in MDD. As a major component, the model proposes that therapeutic SD, by homeostatically enhancing cortical synaptic strength, shifts the initially deficient inducibility of associative synaptic long-term potentiation (LTP) in patients with MDD in a more favorable window of associative plasticity. Research on the molecular effects of SD in animals and humans, including observations in the neurotrophic, adenosinergic, monoaminergic, and glutamatergic system, provides some support for the hypothesis of associative synaptic plasticity facilitation after therapeutic SD in MDD. The model proposes a novel framework for a mechanism of action of therapeutic SD that can be further tested in humans based on non-invasive indices and in animals based on direct studies of synaptic plasticity. Further determining the mechanisms of action of SD might contribute to the development of novel fast acting treatments for MDD, one of the major health problems worldwide.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Fear Extinction as a Model for Synaptic Plasticity in Major Depressive Disorder

Marion Kuhn; Nora Höger; Bernd Feige; Jens Blechert; Claus Normann; Christoph Nissen

Background The neuroplasticity hypothesis of major depressive disorder proposes that a dysfunction of synaptic plasticity represents a basic pathomechanism of the disorder. Animal models of depression indicate enhanced plasticity in a ventral emotional network, comprising the amygdala. Here, we investigated fear extinction learning as a non-invasive probe for amygdala-dependent synaptic plasticity in patients with major depressive disorder and healthy controls. Methods Differential fear conditioning was measured in 37 inpatients with severe unipolar depression (International Classification of Diseases, 10th revision, criteria) and 40 healthy controls. The eye-blink startle response, a subcortical output signal that is modulated by local synaptic plasticity in the amygdala in fear acquisition and extinction learning, was recorded as the primary outcome parameter. Results After robust and similar fear acquisition in both groups, patients with major depressive disorder showed significantly enhanced fear extinction learning in comparison to healthy controls, as indicated by startle responses to conditioned stimuli. The strength of extinction learning was positively correlated with the total illness duration. Conclusions The finding of enhanced fear extinction learning in major depressive disorder is consistent with the concept that the disorder is characterized by enhanced synaptic plasticity in the amygdala and the ventral emotional network. Clinically, the observation emphasizes the potential of successful extinction learning, the basis of exposure therapy, in anxiety-related disorders despite the frequent comorbidity of major depressive disorder.


Neuropsychopharmacology | 2016

Modulation of Total Sleep Time by Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation (tDCS)

Lukas Frase; Hannah Piosczyk; Sulamith Zittel; Friederike Jahn; Peter Selhausen; Lukas Krone; Bernd Feige; F Mainberger; Jonathan G. Maier; Marion Kuhn; Stefan Klöppel; Claus Normann; Annette Sterr; Kai Spiegelhalder; Dieter Riemann; Michael A. Nitsche; Christoph Nissen

Arousal and sleep are fundamental physiological processes, and their modulation is of high clinical significance. This study tested the hypothesis that total sleep time (TST) in humans can be modulated by the non-invasive brain stimulation technique transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) targeting a ‘top-down’ cortico-thalamic pathway of sleep-wake regulation. Nineteen healthy participants underwent a within-subject, repeated-measures protocol across five nights in the sleep laboratory with polysomnographic monitoring (adaptation, baseline, three experimental nights). tDCS was delivered via bi-frontal target electrodes and bi-parietal return electrodes before sleep (anodal ‘activation’, cathodal ‘deactivation’, and sham stimulation). Bi-frontal anodal stimulation significantly decreased TST, compared with cathodal and sham stimulation. This effect was location specific. Bi-frontal cathodal stimulation did not significantly increase TST, potentially due to ceiling effects in good sleepers. Exploratory resting-state EEG analyses before and after the tDCS protocols were consistent with the notion of increased cortical arousal after anodal stimulation and decreased cortical arousal after cathodal stimulation. The study provides proof-of-concept that TST can be decreased by non-invasive bi-frontal anodal tDCS in healthy humans. Further elucidating the ‘top-down’ pathway of sleep-wake regulation is expected to increase knowledge on the fundamentals of sleep-wake regulation and to contribute to the development of novel treatments for clinical conditions of disturbed arousal and sleep.


Journal of Sleep Research | 2013

The effect of sleep-specific brain activity versus reduced stimulus interference on declarative memory consolidation.

Hannah Piosczyk; Johannes Holz; Bernd Feige; Kai Spiegelhalder; Friederike Weber; Nina Landmann; Marion Kuhn; Lukas Frase; Dieter Riemann; Ulrich Voderholzer; Christoph Nissen

Studies suggest that the consolidation of newly acquired memories and underlying long‐term synaptic plasticity might represent a major function of sleep. In a combined repeated‐measures and parallel‐group sleep laboratory study (active waking versus sleep, passive waking versus sleep), we provide evidence that brief periods of daytime sleep (42.1 ± 8.9 min of non‐rapid eye movement sleep) in healthy adolescents (16 years old, all female), compared with equal periods of waking, promote the consolidation of declarative memory (word‐pairs) in participants with high power in the electroencephalographic sleep spindle (sigma) frequency range. This observation supports the notion that sleep‐specific brain activity when reaching a critical dose, beyond a mere reduction of interference, promotes synaptic plasticity in a hippocampal‐neocortical network that underlies the consolidation of declarative memory.


Sleep | 2016

Sleep Strengthens but does Not Reorganize Memory Traces in a Verbal Creativity Task.

Nina Landmann; Marion Kuhn; Jonathan-Gabriel Maier; Bernd Feige; Kai Spiegelhalder; Dieter Riemann; Christoph Nissen

STUDY OBJECTIVES Sleep after learning promotes the quantitative strengthening of new memories. Less is known about the impact of sleep on the qualitative reorganization of memory content. This study tested the hypothesis that sleep facilitates both memory strengthening and reorganization as indexed by a verbal creativity task. METHODS Sixty healthy university students (30 female, 30 male, 20-30 years) were investigated in a randomized, controlled parallel-group study with three experimental groups (sleep, sleep deprivation, daytime wakefulness). At baseline, 60 items of the Compound Remote Associate (CRA) task were presented. At retest after the experimental conditions, the same items were presented again together with 20 new control items to disentangle off-line incubation from online performance effects. RESULTS Sleep significantly strengthened formerly encoded memories in comparison to both wake conditions (improvement in speed of correctly resolved items). Offline reorganization was not enhanced following sleep, but was enhanced following sleep-deprivation in comparison to sleep and daytime wakefulness (solution time of previously incubated, newly solved items). Online performance did not differ between the groups (solution time of new control items). CONCLUSIONS The results support the notion that sleep promotes the strengthening, but not the reorganization, of newly encoded memory traces in a verbal creativity task. Future studies are needed to further determine the impact of sleep on different types of memory reorganization, such as associative thinking, creativity and emotional memory processing, and potential clinical translations, such as the augmentation of psychotherapy through sleep interventions.


Journal of Sleep Research | 2018

Declarative virtual water maze learning and emotional fear conditioning in primary insomnia

Marion Kuhn; Elisabeth Hertenstein; Bernd Feige; Nina Landmann; Kai Spiegelhalder; Chiara Baglioni; Johanna Hemmerling; Diana Durand; Lukas Frase; Stefan Klöppel; Dieter Riemann; Christoph Nissen

Healthy sleep restores the brains ability to adapt to novel input through memory formation based on activity‐dependent refinements of the strength of neural transmission across synapses (synaptic plasticity). In line with this framework, patients with primary insomnia often report subjective memory impairment. However, investigations of memory performance did not produce conclusive results. The aim of this study was to further investigate memory performance in patients with primary insomnia in comparison to healthy controls, using two well‐characterized learning tasks, a declarative virtual water maze task and emotional fear conditioning. Twenty patients with primary insomnia according to DSM‐IV criteria (17 females, three males, 43.5 ± 13.0 years) and 20 good sleeper controls (17 females, three males, 41.7 ± 12.8 years) were investigated in a parallel‐group study. All participants completed a hippocampus‐dependent virtual Morris water maze task and amygdala‐dependent classical fear conditioning. Patients with insomnia showed significantly delayed memory acquisition in the virtual water maze task, but no significant difference in fear acquisition compared with controls. These findings are consistent with the notion that memory processes that emerge from synaptic refinements in a hippocampal–neocortical network are particularly sensitive to chronic disruptions of sleep, while those in a basic emotional amygdala‐dependent network may be more resilient.

Collaboration


Dive into the Marion Kuhn's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Bernd Feige

University of Freiburg

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Nina Landmann

University Medical Center Freiburg

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Lukas Frase

University Medical Center Freiburg

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Chiara Baglioni

University Medical Center Freiburg

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Hannah Piosczyk

University Medical Center Freiburg

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge