1. Brief periods of NREM sleep do not promote early offline gains but subsequent on-task performance in motor skill learning
- Author
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Hannah Piosczyk, Bernd Feige, Nina Landmann, Jonathan G. Maier, Lukas Frase, Christoph Deschler, Dieter Riemann, Johannes Holz, Christoph Nissen, Kai Spiegelhalder, Marion Kuhn, Annette Sterr, Stefan Klöppel, and Ulrich Voderholzer
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Polysomnography ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Audiology ,Non-rapid eye movement sleep ,050105 experimental psychology ,Developmental psychology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Learning ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Wakefulness ,Motor skill ,Sleep Stages ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,05 social sciences ,Brain ,Electroencephalography ,Motor Skills ,Finger tapping ,Female ,Memory consolidation ,Sleep (system call) ,Psychology ,Motor learning ,Neuroscience ,Psychomotor Performance ,psychological phenomena and processes ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Sleep modulates motor learning, but its detailed impact on performance curves remains to be fully characterized. This study aimed to further determine the impact of brief daytime periods of NREM sleep on ‘offline’ (task discontinuation after initial training) and ‘on-task’ (performance within the test session) changes in motor skill performance (finger tapping task). In a mixed design (combined parallel group and repeated measures) sleep laboratory study (n = 17 ‘active’ wake vs. sleep, n = 19 ‘passive’ wake vs. sleep), performance curves were assessed prior to and after a 90 min period containing either sleep, active or passive wakefulness. We observed a highly significant, but state- (that is, sleep/wake)-independent early offline gain and improved on-task performance after sleep in comparison to wakefulness. Exploratory curve fitting suggested that the observed sleep effect most likely emerged from an interaction of training-induced improvement and detrimental ‘time-on-task’ processes, such as fatigue. Our results indicate that brief periods of NREM sleep do not promote early offline gains but subsequent on-task performance in motor skill learning.
- Published
- 2017