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"Power Nap" Prevents Burnout;
Morning Sleep Perfects a Skill
Evidence is mounting that sleep - even a nap - appears to enhance
information processing and learning. New experiments by NIMH grantee Alan
Hobson, M.D., Robert Stickgold, Ph.D., and colleagues at Harvard University
show that a midday snooze reverses information overload and that a 20
percent overnight improvement in learning a motor skill is largely traceable
to a late stage of sleep that some early risers might be missing. Overall,
their studies suggest that the brain uses a night's sleep to consolidate the
memories of habits, actions and skills learned during the day.
The bottom line: we should stop feeling guilty about taking that "power
nap" at work or catching those extra winks the night before our piano
recital.
Reporting in the July, 2002 Nature Neuroscience, Sara Mednick, Ph.D.,
Stickgold and colleagues demonstrate that "burnout" - irritation,
frustration and poorer performance on a mental task -- sets in as a day of
training wears on. Subjects performed a visual task, reporting the
horizontal or vertical orientation of three diagonal bars against a
background of horizontal bars in the lower left corner of a computer screen.
Their scores on the task worsened over the course of four daily practice
sessions. Allowing subjects a 30-minute nap after the second session
prevented any further deterioration, while a 1-hour nap actually boosted
performance in the third and fourth sessions back to morning levels.
Rather than generalized fatigue, the researchers suspected that the
burnout was limited to just the brain visual system circuits involved in the
task. To find out, they engaged a fresh set of neural circuitry by switching
the location of the task to the lower right corner of the computer screen
for just the fourth practice session. As predicted, subjects experienced no
burnout and performed about as well as they did in the first session -- or
after a short nap.
This led the researchers to propose that neural networks in the visual
cortex "gradually become saturated with information through repeated
testing, preventing further perceptual processing." They think burnout may
be the brain's "mechanism for preserving information that has been processed
but has not yet been consolidated into memory by sleep."
So how might a nap help? Recordings of brain and ocular electrical
activity monitored while napping revealed that the longer 1-hour naps
contained more than four times as much deep, or slow wave sleep and rapid
eye movement (REM) sleep than the half-hour naps. Subjects who took the
longer naps also spent significantly more time in a slow wave sleep state on
the test day than on a "baseline" day, when they were not practicing.
Previous studies by the Harvard group have traced overnight memory
consolidation and improvement on the same perceptual task to amounts of slow
wave sleep in the first quarter of the night and to REM sleep in the last
quarter. Since a nap hardly allows enough time for the latter early morning
REM sleep effect to develop, a slow wave sleep effect appears to be the
antidote to burnout.
Neural networks involved in the task are refreshed by "mechanisms of
cortical plasticity" operating during slow wave sleep, suggest the
researchers. "Slow wave sleep serves as the initial processing stage of
experience-dependent, long-term learning and as the critical stage for
restoring perceptual performance."
The Harvard team has now extended to a motor-skill task their earlier
discovery of sleep's role in enhancing learning of the perceptual task.
Matthew Walker, Ph.D., Hobson, Stickgold and colleagues report in the July
3, 2002 Neuron that a 20 percent overnight boost in speed on a finger
tapping task is accounted for mostly by stage 2 non-rapid eye movement (NREM)
sleep in the two hours just before waking.
Prior to the study, it was known that people learning motor skills
continue to improve for at least a day following a training session. For
example, musicians, dancers and athletes often report that their performance
has improved even though they haven't practiced for a day or two. But until
now it was unclear whether this could be ascribed to specific sleep states
instead of simply to the passage of time.
In the study, 62 right-handers were asked to type a sequence of numbers
(4-1-3-2-4) with their left hand as rapidly and accurately as possible for
30 seconds. Each finger tap registered as a white dot on a computer screen
rather than the number typed, so subjects didn't know how accurately they
were performing. Twelve such trials separated by 30-second rest periods
constituted a training session, which was scored for speed and accuracy.
Regardless of whether they trained in the morning or the evening,
subjects improved by an average of nearly 60 percent by simply repeating the
task, with most of the boost coming within the first few trials. A group
tested after training in the morning and staying awake for 12 hours showed
no significant improvement. But when tested following a night's sleep, their
performance increased by nearly 19 percent. Another group that trained in
the evening scored 20.5 percent faster after a night's sleep, but gained
only a negligible 2 percent after another 12 hours of waking. To rule out
the possibility that motor skill activity during waking hours might
interfere with consolidation of the task in memory, another group even wore
mittens for a day to prevent skilled finger movements. Their improvement was
negligible -- until after a full night's sleep, when their scores soared by
nearly 20 percent.
Sleep lab monitoring of 12 subjects who trained at 10 PM revealed that
their improved performance was directly proportional to the amount of stage
2 NREM sleep they got in the fourth quarter of the night. Although this
stage represents about half of a night's sleep overall, Walker said he and
his colleagues were surprised at the pivotal role stage 2 NREM plays in
enhancing learning of the motor task, given that REM and slow wave sleep had
accounted for the similar overnight learning improvement in the perceptual
task.
They speculate that sleep may enhance motor skill learning via powerful
bursts of synchronous neuronal firing, called "spindles," characteristic of
stage 2 NREM sleep during the early morning hours. These spindles
predominate around the center of the brain, conspicuously near motor
regions, and are thought to promote new neural connections by triggering an
influx of calcium into cells of the cortex. Studies have observed an
increase in spindles following training on a motor task.
The new findings have implications for learning sports, a musical
instrument, or developing artistic movement control. "All such learning of
new actions may require sleep before the maximum benefit of practice is
expressed," note the researchers. Since a full night's sleep is a
prerequisite to experiencing the critical final two hours of stage 2 NREM
sleep, "life's modern erosion of sleep time could shortchange your brain of
some learning potential," added Walker.
The findings also underscore why sleep may be important to the learning
involved in recovering function following insults to the brain's motor
system, as in stoke. They also may help to explain why infants sleep so
much. "Their intensity of learning may drive the brain's hunger for large
amounts of sleep," suggested Walker.
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