Consolidation during sleep of perceptual learning of spoken language
Top Cited Papers
- 1 October 2003
- journal article
- clinical trial
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature
- Vol. 425 (6958) , 614-616
- https://doi.org/10.1038/nature01951
Abstract
Memory consolidation resulting from sleep has been seen broadly: in verbal list learning, spatial learning, and skill acquisition in visual and motor tasks. These tasks do not generalize across spatial locations or motor sequences, or to different stimuli in the same location. Although episodic rote learning constitutes a large part of any organism's learning, generalization is a hallmark of adaptive behaviour. In speech, the same phoneme often has different acoustic patterns depending on context. Training on a small set of words improves performance on novel words using the same phonemes but with different acoustic patterns, demonstrating perceptual generalization. Here we show a role of sleep in the consolidation of a naturalistic spoken-language learning task that produces generalization of phonological categories across different acoustic patterns. Recognition performance immediately after training showed a significant improvement that subsequently degraded over the span of a day's retention interval, but completely recovered following sleep. Thus, sleep facilitates the recovery and subsequent retention of material learned opportunistically at any time throughout the day. Performance recovery indicates that representations and mappings associated with generalization are refined and stabilized during sleep.Keywords
This publication has 22 references indexed in Scilit:
- The restorative effect of naps on perceptual deteriorationNature Neuroscience, 2002
- Effects of early and late nocturnal sleep on priming and spatial memoryPsychophysiology, 1999
- COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE OF HUMAN MEMORYAnnual Review of Psychology, 1998
- Posttraining paradoxical sleep in rats is increased after spatial learning in the Morris water maze.Behavioral Neuroscience, 1997
- Consolidation in human motor memoryNature, 1996
- Functional MRI evidence for adult motor cortex plasticity during motor skill learningNature, 1995
- Dependence on REM Sleep of Overnight Improvement of a Perceptual SkillScience, 1994
- Short‐term memory, alertness and performance: a reappraisal of their relationship to body temperatureJournal of Sleep Research, 1992
- Orientation of letters and errors in their recognitionPerception & Psychophysics, 1969
- Coarticulation in VCV Utterances: Spectrographic MeasurementsThe Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 1966