A midday nap
markedly boosts
the brain's
learning
capacity
Findings suggest
that a biphasic
sleep schedule
not only
refreshes the
mind, but can
make you smarter
If you see a
student dozing
in the library
or a co-worker
catching 40
winks in her
cubicle, don't
roll your eyes.
New research
from the
University of
California,
Berkeley, shows
that an hour's
nap can
dramatically
boost and
restore your
brain power.
Indeed, the
findings suggest
that a biphasic
sleep schedule
not only
refreshes the
mind, but can
make you
smarter.
Conversely,
the more hours
we spend awake,
the more
sluggish our
minds become,
according to the
findings. The
results support
previous data
from the same
research team
that pulling an
all-nighter – a
common practice
at college
during midterms
and finals –-
decreases the
ability to cram
in new facts by
nearly 40
percent, due to
a shutdown of
brain regions
during sleep
deprivation.
"Sleep not
only rights the
wrong of
prolonged
wakefulness but,
at a
neurocognitive
level, it moves
you beyond where
you were before
you took a nap,"
said Matthew
Walker, an
assistant
professor of
psychology at UC
Berkeley and the
lead
investigator of
these studies.
In the recent
UC Berkeley
sleep study, 39
healthy young
adults were
divided into two
groups – nap and
no-nap. At noon,
all the
participants
were subjected
to a rigorous
learning task
intended to tax
the hippocampus,
a region of the
brain that helps
store fact-based
memories. Both
groups performed
at comparable
levels.
At 2 p.m.,
the nap group
took a 90-minute
siesta while the
no-nap group
stayed awake.
Later that day,
at 6 p.m.,
participants
performed a new
round of
learning
exercises. Those
who remained
awake throughout
the day became
worse at
learning. In
contrast, those
who napped did
markedly better
and actually
improved in
their capacity
to learn.
These
findings
reinforce the
researchers'
hypothesis that
sleep is needed
to clear the
brain's
short-term
memory storage
and make room
for new
information,
said Matthew
Walker who
presented
his preliminary
findings at the annual
meeting of the
American
Association of
the Advancement
of Science
(AAAS) in San
Diego, Calif.
Since 2007,
Walker and other
sleep
researchers have
established that
fact-based
memories are
temporarily
stored in the
hippocampus
before being
sent to the
brain's
prefrontal
cortex, which
may have more
storage space.
"It's as
though the
e-mail inbox in
your hippocampus
is full and,
until you sleep
and clear out
those fact
e-mails, you're
not going to
receive any more
mail. It's just
going to bounce
until you sleep
and move it into
another folder,"
Walker said.
In the latest
study, Walker
and his team
have broken new
ground in
discovering that
this memory-
refreshing
process occurs
when nappers are
engaged in a
specific stage
of sleep.
Electroencephalogram
tests, which
measure
electrical
activity in the
brain, indicated
that this
refreshing of
memory capacity
is related to
Stage 2 non-REM
sleep, which
takes place
between deep
sleep (non-REM)
and the dream
state known as
Rapid Eye
Movement (REM).
Previously, the
purpose of this
stage was
unclear, but the
new results
offer evidence
as to why humans
spend at least
half their
sleeping hours
in Stage 2,
non-REM, Walker
said.
"I can't
imagine Mother
Nature would
have us spend 50
percent of the
night going from
one sleep stage
to another for
no reason,"
Walker said.
"Sleep is
sophisticated.
It acts locally
to give us what
we need."
Walker and
his team will go
on to
investigate
whether the
reduction of
sleep
experienced by
people as they
get older is
related to the
documented
decrease in our
ability to learn
as we age.
Finding that
link may be
helpful in
understanding
such
neurodegenerative
conditions as
Alzheimer's
disease, Walker
said.
Bibliography - Sources
-
University of
California -
Berkeley
-
American
Association
of the
Advancement
of Science
(AAAS) 2010;Annual
meeting,
-
National
Center on
Sleep
Disorders
Research
-
National
Sleep
Foundation
-
American
Sleep Apnea
Association
|