Publication | Closed Access
Sleep does not enhance motor sequence learning.
171
Citations
25
References
2008
Year
Sleep DisordersMotor LearningMotor SkillMotor ControlMotor Sequence LearningSleep MedicineKinesiologyMotor Sequence PerformanceSleep Enhancement EffectCognitive NeuroscienceSleep ConsolidationHealth SciencesSleepRehabilitationInsomniaSleep DeprivationPhysical TherapySleep DisorderProcedural MemoryNeuroscienceMedicine
Improvements in motor sequence performance have been observed after a delay involving sleep. This finding has been taken as evidence for an active sleep consolidation process that enhances subsequent performance. In a review of this literature, however, the authors observed 4 aspects of data analyses and experimental design that could lead to improved performance on the test in the absence of any sleep consolidation: (a) masking of learning effects in the averaged data, (b) masking of reactive inhibition effects in the averaged training data, (c) time-of-day and time-since-sleep confounds, and (d) a gradual buildup of fatigue over the course of massed (i.e., concentrated) training. In 2 experiments the authors show that when these factors are controlled for, or when their effects are substantially reduced, the sleep enhancement effect is eliminated. Whereas sleep may play a role in protection from forgetting of motor skills, it does not result in performance enhancement.
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