| Literature DB >> 27291337 |
Katharine N S Simon1, Denise Werchan2, Michael R Goldstein1, Lucia Sweeney1, Richard R Bootzin1, Lynn Nadel1, Rebecca L Gómez3.
Abstract
Infants show robust ability to track transitional probabilities within language and can use this information to extract words from continuous speech. The degree to which infants remember these words across a delay is unknown. Given well-established benefits of sleep on long-term memory retention in adults, we examine whether sleep similarly facilitates memory in 6.5month olds. Infants listened to an artificial language for 7minutes, followed by a period of sleep or wakefulness. After a time-matched delay for sleep and wakefulness dyads, we measured retention using the head-turn-preference procedure. Infants who slept retained memory for the extracted words that was prone to interference during the test. Infants who remained awake showed no retention. Within the nap group, retention correlated with three electrophysiological measures (1) absolute theta across the brain, (2) absolute alpha across the brain, and (3) greater fronto-central slow wave activity (SWA).Entities:
Keywords: Infants; Language acquisition; Memory retention; Sleep; Statistical learning
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27291337 DOI: 10.1016/j.bandl.2016.05.002
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Brain Lang ISSN: 0093-934X Impact factor: 2.381