Literature DB >> 15576888

Sleep-dependent learning and motor-skill complexity.

Kenichi Kuriyama1, Robert Stickgold, Matthew P Walker.   

Abstract

Learning of a procedural motor-skill task is known to progress through a series of unique memory stages. Performance initially improves during training, and continues to improve, without further rehearsal, across subsequent periods of sleep. Here, we investigate how this delayed sleep-dependent learning is affected when the task characteristics are varied across several degrees of difficulty, and whether this improvement differentially enhances individual transitions of the motor-sequence pattern being learned. We report that subjects show similar overnight improvements in speed whether learning a five-element unimanual sequence (17.7% improvement), a nine-element unimanual sequence (20.2%), or a five-element bimanual sequence (17.5%), but show markedly increased overnight improvement (28.9%) with a nine-element bimanual sequence. In addition, individual transitions within the motor-sequence pattern that appeared most difficult at the end of training showed a significant 17.8% increase in speed overnight, whereas those transitions that were performed most rapidly at the end of training showed only a non-significant 1.4% improvement. Together, these findings suggest that the sleep-dependent learning process selectively provides maximum benefit to motor-skill procedures that proved to be most difficult prior to sleep.

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Mesh:

Year:  2004        PMID: 15576888      PMCID: PMC534699          DOI: 10.1101/lm.76304

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Learn Mem        ISSN: 1072-0502            Impact factor:   2.460


  40 in total

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7.  Quantification of sleepiness: a new approach.

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10.  Sleep and the time course of motor skill learning.

Authors:  Matthew P Walker; Tiffany Brakefield; Joshua Seidman; Alexandra Morgan; J Allan Hobson; Robert Stickgold
Journal:  Learn Mem       Date:  2003 Jul-Aug       Impact factor: 2.460

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  96 in total

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Review 8.  A review of evidence for the claim that children are sleeping less than in the past.

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Review 9.  The role of sleep in changing our minds: a psychologist's discussion of papers on memory reactivation and consolidation in sleep.

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Review 10.  About sleep's role in memory.

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