Certain memories may rest on a good sleep.When practicing a musical piece, a gymnastics move, or any other activity that depends on effortless, virtually automatic execution, here's some memory-enhancing advice: If you snooze, you cruise. That, at least, is the implication of two new studies in which people who practiced a task that demands quick visual processing Visual processing is the sequence of steps that information takes as it flows from visual sensors to cognitive processing. The sensors may be zoological eyes or they may be cameras or sensor arrays that sense various portions of the electromagnetic spectrum. performed it better on ensuing trials if they were first allowed to get some sleep. Moreover, one investigation suggests that the initial night of sleep after learning so-called procedural skills proves crucial for memory. The other findings indicate that sleep early in the night, which includes mainly slow-wave electrical activity in the brain, aids procedural recall. Rapid-eye-movement (REM) sleep later in the night strengthens only memories already bolstered by slow-wave sleep Slow-wave sleep (SWS) is made up of the two deepest stages of non-rapid eye movement sleep. SWS is often referred to as deep sleep. The highest arousal thresholds (e.g. , the researchers report. Both studies appear in the December NATURE NEUROSCIENCE Nature Neuroscience is a scientific journal published by Nature Publishing Group, the publisher of Nature. Its focus is original research papers relating specifically to neuroscience. . "It's becoming increasingly clear that sleep is critical for consolidating procedural memory Procedural memory, also known as implicit memory or unconscious memory, is the long-term memory of skills and procedures, or "how to" knowledge (procedural knowledge). As compared with declarative memory, it is governed by different mechanisms and different brain circuits. into a usable form," says neuroscientist Robert Stickgold Robert Stickgold is an Assistant Professor of Psychiatry at Harvard Medical School. A preeminent sleep researcher, Dr. Stickgold dedicated his life to understanding the relationship between sleep and learning. He is also a very active educator. of Harvard Medical School Harvard Medical School (HMS) is one of the graduate schools of Harvard University. It is a prestigious American medical school located in the Longwood Medical Area of the Mission Hill neighborhood of Boston, Massachusetts. in Boston. Stickgold and his colleagues conducted one of the new studies. In an afternoon session, they trained 133 volunteers to perform a visual-discrimination task. Participants viewed, for a fraction of a second, an image including a small set of diagonal bars against a background of horizontal bars. The screen then went blank for a variable period, followed by a distracting pattern for a fraction of a second. Then, the participants reported the orientation of the diagonal bars. The researchers determined the minimum amount of blank-screen time needed by each volunteer to overcome the distraction and discern the orientation. Participants who slept on the night after training performed the task better--just as accurately, using less blank-screen time--the following day. They showed further gains over the next 3 days. In contrast, people deprived of sleep on the night after training didn't perform the task better the next day. Even when allowed to catch up on their sleep over the next 2 nights, they exhibited little improvement. "These results suggest that the first night of sleep is crucial for acquisition of the new visual skill," says neuroscientist Pierre Maquet of University College London “UCL” redirects here. For other uses, see UCL (disambiguation). University College London, commonly known as UCL, is the oldest multi-faculty constituent college of the University of London, one of the two original founding colleges, and the first British in a comment published in the same journal. Maquet has linked brain changes during REM sleep REM sleep n. A stage in the normal sleep cycle during which dreams occur and the body undergoes various physiological changes, including rapid eye movement, loss of reflexes, and increased pulse rate and brain activity. to procedural learning procedural learning, n term used in the Feldenkrais method; refers to the preverbal stage of knowledge acquisition in which a baby relates to the surroundings in an essentially non-verbal, nonanalytical fashion. See also method, Feldenkrais. (SN: 7/22/00, p. 55). The slow-wave portion of sleep may nevertheless prove essential for procedural-memory formation, according to the second study, directed by Steffen Gais of the Medical University of Lubeck in Germany. Gais and his coworkers trained 21 volunteers on a visual task much like that used by Stickgold. Performance improved markedly for those who trained for 1 hour in the afternoon and then were tested after sleeping for the first 3 hours of the night, during which the brain shows mainly slow waves. No improvement occurred for those who trained after awakening from the first 3 hours of sleep and were tested after sleeping through the rest of the night. Volunteers who slept through the entire night after training exhibited a much larger performance boost than those tested after the first 3 hours of sleep. These findings suggest that slow-wave triggers procedural memory formation whereas REM sleep amplifies that process Maquet remarks. However, neither of the new studies establishes sleep as essential to memory consolidation, says Robert Vertes of Florida Atlantic University “FAU” redirects here. For other uses, see FAU (disambiguation). Florida Atlantic University, also referred to as FAU or Florida Atlantic, is a public, coeducational research university with its main campus in Boca Raton, Florida, United States. in Boca Raton. Stickgold's data also show memory improvement with the mere passage of time, Vertes points out. Researchers know even less about the effects of sleep deprivation sleep deprivation Sleep disorders A prolonged period without the usual amount of sleep. See Driver fatigue, Poor sleeping hygiene, Sleep disorders, Sleep-onset insomnia. on memories that require conscious effort, Stickgold notes. For instance, staying up all night to cram for a test may work for some students, although they probably forget what they have learned in a few days, he says. |
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