Research Data

Dataset for: Sleep Links Gist Abstraction to Veridical Memory

Author(s) / Creator(s)

Nagel, Juliane
Sander, Samuel
Diekelmann, Susanne
Feld, Gordon Benedikt

Abstract / Description

Sleep is important for memory consolidation. By strengthening the original memory trace, sleep may improve monitoring processes, and thus the distinction between veridical and false memories. Simultaneously, sleep may facilitate gist abstraction and thus enhance false memory generation. Here, this question is studied using the Deese–Roediger–McDermott (DRM) paradigm, where participants learn lists of semantically related words, constructed to lead to false retrieval of lure words (semantically linked to the lists, but never presented). Previous literature has found sleep to increase or decrease false memories, or no significant effect, which might be due to methodological variance, but can also be explained by low statistical power. In this large online study (sleep = 104, wake = 101, AM control = 99, PM control = 94), a preregistered replication of Diekelmann et al. (2010), we find no effect of sleep on false memories, nor on general memory performance. We also do not replicate the finding that sleep increases false memories when overall memory performance is low. Instead, we find that false memories increase after sleep when intrusion-adjusted memory performance is high. We interpret this as generalization process during sleep (gist), which helps to form veridical memory, but also generates false memories.

Keyword(s)

false memory DRM sleep gist replication

Persistent Identifier

Date of first publication

2026-02-23

Temporal coverage

2022-08 to 2022-10

Publisher

PsychArchives

Citation

  • drm_words_counts.csv
    Unknown  - 17.48KB
    MD5 : 6f4be404d707fa5a7a6b6613eab2f11e
    Description: Summarised counts for correct responses, false memories and intrusions for each participant. Only includes data of the participants that were included in the final analysis (see exclusion table). Also contains the summary data of the verbal fluency task.
  • drm_demographics_all.csv
    Unknown  - 205.79KB
    MD5 : 3434d2a2ccfd285f1509ff55bb2a0334
    Description: Demographic information of all participants, including those who were excluded from the final analysis, or did not begin the main study after screening.
  • drm_words_final_rating.csv
    Unknown  - 709.98KB
    MD5 : c471151b5c36581e9377fbece938e5ef
    Description: All responses from the DRM test phase, evaluated ("correct", "false memory" or "intrusion"). Includes data of included and excluded participants (see exclusion table). Raw responses are masked (see CODEBOOK).
  • exclusion_table.csv
    Unknown  - 41.55KB
    MD5 : d395c7d9dca171f319a2edee532a2b8a
    Description: Which participant (who started at least the first session of the main study) fulfilled which exclusion criteria and for which reason(s), if any.
  • pvt.csv
    Unknown  - 1.08MB
    MD5 : 77f71dab91f947dc64eb6a0affea5ad9
    Description: Trialwise data of the Psychomotor Vigilance Task.
  • trial_names.txt
    Text  - 8.86KB
    MD5 : 92b55d437ac1cf467469616977cd7691
    Description: List of trial names and what happened in each trial of the main study.
  • word_lists.csv
    Unknown  - 0.74KB
    MD5 : 3da074775237bac319cfbdc2752d6321
    Description: Word lists used in the DRM paradigm. Responses are masked, but the information which list word belongs to which critical lure is retained: Each column is one word list.
  • CODEBOOK.txt
    Text  - 33.43KB
    MD5 : 678ae3b9f3f8fd9039bbab224c8a08ff
    Description: Description of all files and variables; general study information
  • drm_control_data.csv
    Unknown  - 81.39KB
    MD5 : b8f47ac925dbdca70e33caa9e85d7e68
    Description: Responses to the control tasks: Stanford Sleepiness Scale and Verbal Fluency Task.
  • drm_cleaned.csv
    Unknown  - 63.28MB
    MD5 : bc6d015f6b19ecc33eeb066fea8f900a
    Description: Full data from the entire main study, after some minor preprocessing steps (e.g., censoring Prolific IDs, clarification of trial names if necessary, response masking (see CODEBOOK)).
  • Author(s) / Creator(s)
    Nagel, Juliane
  • Author(s) / Creator(s)
    Sander, Samuel
  • Author(s) / Creator(s)
    Diekelmann, Susanne
  • Author(s) / Creator(s)
    Feld, Gordon Benedikt
  • Temporal coverage
    2022-08:2022-10
  • PsychArchives acquisition timestamp
    2026-02-23T13:11:28Z
  • Made available on
    2026-02-23T13:11:28Z
  • Date of first publication
    2026-02-23
  • Abstract / Description
    Sleep is important for memory consolidation. By strengthening the original memory trace, sleep may improve monitoring processes, and thus the distinction between veridical and false memories. Simultaneously, sleep may facilitate gist abstraction and thus enhance false memory generation. Here, this question is studied using the Deese–Roediger–McDermott (DRM) paradigm, where participants learn lists of semantically related words, constructed to lead to false retrieval of lure words (semantically linked to the lists, but never presented). Previous literature has found sleep to increase or decrease false memories, or no significant effect, which might be due to methodological variance, but can also be explained by low statistical power. In this large online study (sleep = 104, wake = 101, AM control = 99, PM control = 94), a preregistered replication of Diekelmann et al. (2010), we find no effect of sleep on false memories, nor on general memory performance. We also do not replicate the finding that sleep increases false memories when overall memory performance is low. Instead, we find that false memories increase after sleep when intrusion-adjusted memory performance is high. We interpret this as generalization process during sleep (gist), which helps to form veridical memory, but also generates false memories.
    en
  • Review status
    peerReviewed
  • Persistent Identifier
    https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12034/17064
  • Persistent Identifier
    https://doi.org/10.23668/psycharchives.21686
  • Language of content
    eng
  • Publisher
    PsychArchives
  • Is related to
    https://www.psycharchives.org/handle/20.500.12034/17065
  • Keyword(s)
    false memory
  • Keyword(s)
    DRM
  • Keyword(s)
    sleep
  • Keyword(s)
    gist
  • Keyword(s)
    replication
  • Dewey Decimal Classification number(s)
    150
  • Title
    Dataset for: Sleep Links Gist Abstraction to Veridical Memory
    en
  • DRO type
    researchData