

S3E7 - Can sleep help us unlearn negative bias and update disturbing memories?- Xiaoqing Hu
7 snips Oct 1, 2025
In this engaging discussion, Professor Xiaoqing Hu, a pioneer in sleep and memory research from the University of Hong Kong, explores how sleep can reshape implicit biases and memories. He delves into Targeted Memory Reactivation (TMR), revealing how pairing sounds with counter-stereotypic responses during sleep can reduce negative biases. Hu also explains the crucial roles of REM and NREM sleep in emotional memory updating and the intriguing potential of TMR for clinical applications. Discover how sleep can be a powerful tool for unlearning and positivity!
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Sleep Stabilizes Counter-Bias Training
- Counter-bias training immediately reduces IAT-measured implicit bias but the effect often returns after days without consolidation.
- Hu used TMR during slow-wave sleep to stabilize training benefits and found effects persisted one week later.
From PhD Studies To A TMR Breakthrough
- Xiaoqing Hu described how his PhD work on implicit association tests and later exposure to TMR research inspired the implicit-bias sleep study.
- He combined counter-bias training with TMR after finishing his thesis and collected data in 2014 to test the idea.
Sound Paired With Correct Counter-Bias Responses
- In the bias study, Hu played an auditory tone as feedback whenever participants produced fast, correct counter-stereotypic responses.
- He later replayed that same tone during slow-wave sleep to reactivate the trained counter-bias associations.