A ninety minute daytime nap helps speed up the process
of long term memory consolidation, a recent study conducted
by Prof. Avi Karni and Dr. Maria Korman of the Center
for Brain and Behavior Research at the University of Haifa
found. "We still don't know the exact mechanism of
the memory process that occurs during sleep, but the results
of this research suggest the possibility that it is possible
to speed up memory consolidation, and in the future, we
may be able to do it artificially," said Prof. Karni.
Long term memory is defined as a permanent memory that
doesn't disappear or that disappears after many years.
This part of our memory is divided into two types -- memories
of "what" (for example: what happened yesterday
or what one remembers from an article one read yesterday)
and memories of "how to" (for example: how to
read Hebrew, how to drive, play basketball or play the
piano).
In this new research, which was conducted by researchers
at the University of Haifa in cooperation with the Sleep
Laboratory at the Sheba Medical Center and researchers
from the Department of Psychology at the University of
Montreal, it was revealed that a daytime nap changes the
course of consolidation in the brain. Two groups of participants
in the study practiced a repeated motor activity which
consisted of bringing the thumb and a finger together
at a specific sequence. The research examined the "how"
aspect of memory in the participants' ability to perform
the task quickly and in the correct sequence. One of the
groups was allowed to nap for an hour and a half after
learning the task while the other group stayed awake.
The group that slept in the afternoon showed a distinct
improvement in their task performance by that evening,
as opposed to the group that stayed awake, which did not
exhibit any improvement. Following an entire night's sleep,
both groups exhibited the same skill level. "This
part of the research showed that a daytime nap speeds
up performance improvement in the brain. After a night's
sleep the two groups were at the same level, but the group
that slept in the afternoon improved much faster than
the group that stayed awake," stressed Prof. Karni.
A second experiment showed that another aspect of memory
consolidation is accelerated by sleep. It was previously
shown that during the 6-8 hours after completing an effective
practice session, the neural process of "how"
memory consolidation is susceptible to interference, such
that if, for example, one learns or performs a second,
different task, one's brain will not be able to successfully
remember the first trained task.
A third group of participants in the University of Haifa
study learned a different thumb-to-finger movement sequence
two hours after practicing the first task. As the second
task was introduced at the beginning of the 6-8 hour period
during which the brain consolidates memories, the second
task disturbed the memory consolidation process and this
group did not show any improvement in their ability to
perform the task, neither in the evening of that day nor
on the following morning. However, when a fourth group
of participants was allowed a 90 minute nap between learning
the first set of movements and the second, they did not
show much improvement in the evening, but on the following
morning these participants showed a marked improvement
of their performance, as if there had been no interference
at all.
"This part of the study demonstrated, for the first
time, that daytime sleep can shorten the time "how
to" memory becomes immune to interference and forgetting.
Instead of 6-8 hours, the brain consolidated the memory
during the 90 minute nap," explains Prof. Karni who
added that while this study demonstrates that the process
of memory consolidation is accelerated during daytime
sleep, it is still not clear which mechanisms sleep accelerates
in the process.
The elucidation of these mechanisms, say the researchers,
could enable the development of methods to accelerate
memory consolidation in adults and to create stable memories
in a short time. Until then, if you need to memorize something
quickly or if your schedule is filled with different activities
which require learning "how" to do things, it
is worth finding the time for an afternoon nap.
The research was published in the scientific journal
Nature Neuroscience.