Abstract
We investigated whether learning performance in a procedural finger tapping task before nocturnal sleep would predict performance gains after sleep in 60 young adults. Gains were defined as change in correctly tapped digit sequences between learning (12 trials ad minist er ed in the evening) and retesting (3 trials administere d in the morning after sleep). The same task was also administered to a separate wake group (N = 54 young adults), which learned in the morning and was retested in the evening. Learning performance was determined by either using the average performance on the last three learning trials or the a verage performance on the best three learning trials. Our results demonstrated an inverse association between learning performance and gains in procedural skill, i.e., good learners exhibited smaller performance gains across both wakefulness and sleep than poor learners. Regardless of learning performance, gains in finger tapping skills were greater after sleep than daytime wakefulness. Importantly, some of our findings were influenced by how learning performance was estimated. Collectively, these results suggest that learning performance and the method through which it is estimated may influence performance gains in finger tapping skills across both sleep and wakefulness.
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CITATION STYLE
Rångtell, F. H., Karamchedu, S., Andersson, P., Van Egmond, L., Hultgren, T., Broman, J. E., … Benedict, C. (2017). Learning performance is linked to procedural memory consolidation across both sleep and wakefulness. Scientific Reports, 7(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-09263-5
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