Reactivating memories during sleep improves motor skills.

Practice makes perfect, but sleep helps, too. Learning and executing a new motor skill can be enhanced if you can get additional memory processing during sleep, according to new research published in JNeurosci.

Fab Four of Science T-shirt (Series). Exclusively on Scientific Inquirer’s Etsy shop. But one now!

Researchers at Northwestern University compared how well participants performed a challenging motor task with and without the extra processing during sleep. 

The participants played a computer game using a myoelectric computer interface, which enabled them to move a cursor by activating specific arm muscles. Each command to move the cursor in a particular direction was paired with a unique sound; after practicing, the participants played the game blindfolded and moved the cursor based on the sound cue alone.


Common food preservative has unexpected effects on the gut microbiome
Food manufacturers often add preservatives to food products to keep them fresh. …
Big oil companies continue to expand fossil fuel extraction worldwide
Despite the growing social and political discourse in favor of energy transition …
Conversations with Trish O’Kane: Birding to Change the World (and maybe save your soul).
In Birding to Change the World: A Memoir, Trish O'Kane, an accidental …
Why are people climate change deniers?
Do climate change deniers bend the facts to avoid having to modify …

After completing a test round, the participants took a 90-minute nap. The researchers played half of the sound cues during the nap, reactivating the motor memories associated with each cue. After the nap, the participants performed the motions cued during sleep better than the uncued ones: it took less time to move the cursor, the cursor traveled a more direct route, and fewer superfluous muscles were activated.

These results show we can improve the performance of new motor skills by reactivating memories during sleep. This approach could be a way to enhance rehabilitation for stroke or other neurological disorders.

IMAGE CREDIT: Cheng et al., JNeurosci 2021


Processing…
Success! You're on the list.

Leave a Reply

Discover more from Scientific Inquirer

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading