Splitting sleep between the night and a daytime nap reduces homeostatic sleep pressure and enhances long-term memory

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Abstract

Daytime naps have been linked with enhanced memory encoding and consolidation. It remains unclear how a daily napping schedule impacts learning throughout the day, and whether these effects are the same for well-rested and sleep restricted individuals. We compared memory in 112 adolescents who underwent two simulated school weeks containing 8 or 6.5 h sleep opportunities each day. Sleep episodes were nocturnal or split between nocturnal sleep and a 90-min afternoon nap, creating four experimental groups: 8 h-continuous, 8 h-split, 6.5 h-continuous and 6.5 h-split. Declarative memory was assessed with picture encoding and an educationally realistic factual knowledge task. Splitting sleep significantly enhanced afternoon picture encoding and factual knowledge under both 6.5 h and 8 h durations. Splitting sleep also significantly reduced slow-wave energy during nocturnal sleep, suggesting lower homeostatic sleep pressure during the day. There was no negative impact of the split sleep schedule on morning performance, despite a reduction in nocturnal sleep. These findings suggest that naps could be incorporated into a daily sleep schedule that provides sufficient sleep and benefits learning.

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Cousins, J. N., Leong, R. L. F., Jamaluddin, S. A., Ng, A. S. C., Ong, J. L., & Chee, M. W. L. (2021). Splitting sleep between the night and a daytime nap reduces homeostatic sleep pressure and enhances long-term memory. Scientific Reports, 11(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-84625-8

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