Department of Neuroscience, Uppsala University, SE-751 24, Uppsala, Sweden.
Sci Rep. 2017 Aug 31;7(1):10234. doi: 10.1038/s41598-017-09263-5.
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 administered in the evening) and retesting (3 trials administered 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 average 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.
我们研究了 60 名年轻成年人在夜间睡眠前进行程序性手指敲击任务的学习表现是否可以预测他们在睡眠后的表现提升。提升定义为学习(晚上进行 12 次试验)和测试(睡眠后早上进行 3 次试验)之间正确敲击数字序列的变化。同一任务也被施用于单独的清醒组(N = 54 名年轻成年人),该组在早上学习并在晚上测试。学习表现通过使用最后三个学习试验的平均表现或最佳三个学习试验的平均表现来确定。我们的结果表明,学习表现与程序性技能的提升呈反比关系,即好的学习者在清醒和睡眠期间的表现提升都比差的学习者小。无论学习表现如何,手指敲击技能的提升在睡眠后比白天清醒时更大。重要的是,我们的一些发现受到学习表现估计方式的影响。总的来说,这些结果表明学习表现和估计学习表现的方法可能会影响手指敲击技能在睡眠和清醒期间的表现提升。