Extended Data Table 1 Sleep parameters

From: The hippocampus is crucial for forming non-hippocampal long-term memory during sleep

  1. a, Sleep duration and latency during the 2-h post-encoding interval for the sleep groups of the main experiments (Fig. 1). In these experiments retrieval was tested either immediately after the 2-h retention interval (test of recent memory) or 1 week or (for the NOR task only) 3 weeks later (tests of remote memory). There were no significant differences between NOR and OPR task conditions or retention intervals. n = 12, 8, and 11 rats for NOR testing after 2 h, 1 week and 3 weeks, and n = 11 and 9 rats for OPR testing after 2 h and 1 week, respectively. b, Post-encoding sleep in the experiments after bilateral intrahippocampal infusion of muscimol (Fig. 2a). Sleep latency, time in SWS, preREM sleep, and REM sleep are indicated (n = 8 rats for each condition). c, For the same experiments, density and amplitude of slow oscillations (SO) and density, power, and mean duration of spindles identified during SWS are indicated for the vehicle and muscimol conditions. Substances were infused during the 2-h post-encoding interval (upon the first occurrence of SWS). **PreREM P = 0.002, REM P = 0.003, for pairwise t-tests (two-sided) with vehicle condition. Data shown as mean ± s.e.m.