Daytime sleep condenses the time course of motor memory consolidation

被引:0
|
作者
Maria Korman
Julien Doyon
Julia Doljansky
Julie Carrier
Yaron Dagan
Avi Karni
机构
[1] Brain-Behavior Research Center,Department of Psychology
[2] University of Haifa,undefined
[3] Mount Carmel,undefined
[4] University of Montreal,undefined
[5] P.O. Box 6128,undefined
[6] Chronobiology & Sleep Laboratory,undefined
[7] Sheba Medical Center,undefined
来源
Nature Neuroscience | 2007年 / 10卷
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摘要
Two behavioral phenomena characterize human motor memory consolidation: diminishing susceptibility to interference by a subsequent experience and the emergence of delayed, offline gains in performance. A recent model proposes that the sleep-independent reduction in interference is followed by the sleep-dependent expression of offline gains. Here, using the finger-opposition sequence–learning task, we show that an interference experienced at 2 h, but not 8 h, following the initial training prevented the expression of delayed gains at 24 h post-training. However, a 90-min nap, immediately post-training, markedly reduced the susceptibility to interference, with robust delayed gains expressed overnight, despite interference at 2 h post-training. With no interference, a nap resulted in much earlier expression of delayed gains, within 8 h post-training. These results suggest that the evolution of robustness to interference and the evolution of delayed gains can coincide immediately post-training and that both effects reflect sleep-sensitive processes.
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页码:1206 / 1213
页数:7
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