People who sleep for eight hours at a stretch every
night are significantly better at remembering faces and names after
seeing them once, a study has found.
Researchers at
the Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston showed the 14 participants of
the study 20 colour photographs of adult faces with corresponding names
and asked to memorise them.
After 12 hours, they were shown the photos again with the names either matched as earlier or not.
Confidence rating
Apart
from being asked whether the photos and names matched, participants
were to rate their confidence on a scale of one to nine.
“We
know that many different kinds of memories improve with sleep. While a
couple of studies have looked at how naps might affect our ability to
learn new faces and names, no previous studies have looked at the impact
of a full night of sleep in between learning and being tested,” said
Jeanne F. Duffy, associate neuroscientist in the Division of Sleep and
Circadian Disorders of the hospital.
Each participant
took the test twice — once with an interval of sleep in between and
once with a period of regular, waking day activities in between.
When
given an opportunity to sleep for up to eight hours, participants
correctly matched 12 per cent more of the faces and names.
Name to face
“We
found that when participants were given the opportunity to have a full
night’s sleep, their ability to correctly identify the name associated
with a face — and their confidence in their answers — significantly
improved,” she added.
The new findings, conducted on
healthy subjects in their 20s, suggest that sleep after new learning
activities may help improve memory.
The findings were published in the journal
Neurobiology of Learning and Memory
. — PTI
Source : The Hindu, 25-Nov-2015
No comments:
Post a Comment