Sleeping between study sessions improves memory: study
A
French study of student sleep confirms the importance of getting
enough sleep to perform better academically and remember more from revision
sessions. Better still, it shows that sleeping between revision sessions boosts
students' ability to learn from non-written sources and absorb information,
which is easier to reproduce up to six months later.
With
the new academic year about to begin, 18-25 year olds who tend to stay up late
may find that improving their sleeping habits and going to bed between revision
sessions increases their chances of succeeding in their studies.
A
team of cognitive science researchers from the University of Lyon surveyed the
performance of 40 students, randomly divided into two groups. One group was
tested in the morning and then 12 hours later the same evening; the second
group was tested in the evening and then 12 hours later the following morning.
In
the course of the initial test sessions, the participants were told to study 16
bi-lingual word pairs in French and Swahili. Each word pair was presented for
exactly seven seconds.
They were then asked to type the French translation of
the Swahili words as they appeared. Participants were also given the
opportunity to re-examine word pairs that had failed to retain until they fully
completed the exercise.
At
the second test session, the same procedure was followed until all 16 words had
been correctly translated.
Both
groups performed identically in the initial test sessions, with no difference
in the number of words they were able to retain and the number of tries needed
to find all the right answers.
However,
in the second test sessions 12 hours later, those who had slept remembered an
average of 10 of the 16 word pairs, whereas those who had not slept only
remembered 7.5 word pairs.
There
was also a difference in the ability to learn rapidly: "the sleepers"
were able to validate 16 word pairs in just three tries, while those who had
not slept needed twice as many.
In
conclusion, both groups were able to learn the 16 word pairs, but "the
sleepers" learned faster and with less effort.
"It
appears that memories which are not explicitly accessible at the outset of the
learning process are to some degree transformed by a period of sleep,” remarked
researcher Dr Stéphanie Mazza. "It is this transformation that enabled
subjects to re-encode information more rapidly and to gain time in the second
test session."
Not
only does sleep enable students to learn better, but it also helps with the
long-term consolidation of information. A week later, the group who had slept
was much better at remembering the word pairs, with an average score of 15
pairs as opposed to 11 for the non-sleepers. And this advantage was still evident
six months later.
To
effectively memorize course materials, researchers have five recommendations:
first, avoid procrastination and start revising as early as possible. Secondly,
it is important to space out sessions of study on the same subject. Students
who study a lesson once a week for four weeks retain more than those who study
it four times in the same week.
Thirdly, they should regularly test their
knowledge, and fourthly, be sure to study key lessons in the evening. Ensuring
restful sleep is the fifth and most important rule.
Source | http://www.ctvnews.ca/health/sleeping-between-study-sessions-improves-memory-study-1.3041462
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