Practice makes imperfect: restorative effects of sleep on motor learning.

Emerging evidence suggests that sleep plays a key role in procedural learning, particularly in the continued development of motor skill learning following initial acquisition. We argue that a detailed examination of the time course of performance across sleep on the finger-tapping task, established...

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Main Authors: Bhavin R Sheth, Davit Janvelyan, Murtuza Khan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2008-09-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/pmid/18787652/?tool=EBI
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spelling doaj-95988b056d3749e7a89e7744df522eeb2021-03-03T19:55:29ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032008-09-0139e319010.1371/journal.pone.0003190Practice makes imperfect: restorative effects of sleep on motor learning.Bhavin R ShethDavit JanvelyanMurtuza KhanEmerging evidence suggests that sleep plays a key role in procedural learning, particularly in the continued development of motor skill learning following initial acquisition. We argue that a detailed examination of the time course of performance across sleep on the finger-tapping task, established as the paradigm for studying the effect of sleep on motor learning, will help distinguish a restorative role of sleep in motor skill learning from a proactive one. Healthy subjects rehearsed for 12 trials and, following a night of sleep, were tested. Early training rapidly improved speed as well as accuracy on pre-sleep training. Additional rehearsal caused a marked slow-down in further improvement or partial reversal in performance to observed levels below theoretical upper limits derived on the basis of early pre-sleep rehearsal. This decrement in learning efficacy does not occur always, but if and only if it does, overnight sleep has an effect in fully or partly restoring the efficacy and actual performance to the optimal theoretically achieveable level. Our findings re-interpret the sleep-dependent memory enhancement in motor learning reported in the literature as a restoration of fatigued circuitry specialized for the skill. In providing restitution to the fatigued brain, sleep eliminates the rehearsal-induced synaptic fatigue of the circuitry specialized for the task and restores the benefit of early pre-sleep rehearsal. The present findings lend support to the notion that latent sleep-dependent enhancement of performance is a behavioral expression of the brain's restitution in sleep.https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/pmid/18787652/?tool=EBI
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Bhavin R Sheth
Davit Janvelyan
Murtuza Khan
spellingShingle Bhavin R Sheth
Davit Janvelyan
Murtuza Khan
Practice makes imperfect: restorative effects of sleep on motor learning.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Bhavin R Sheth
Davit Janvelyan
Murtuza Khan
author_sort Bhavin R Sheth
title Practice makes imperfect: restorative effects of sleep on motor learning.
title_short Practice makes imperfect: restorative effects of sleep on motor learning.
title_full Practice makes imperfect: restorative effects of sleep on motor learning.
title_fullStr Practice makes imperfect: restorative effects of sleep on motor learning.
title_full_unstemmed Practice makes imperfect: restorative effects of sleep on motor learning.
title_sort practice makes imperfect: restorative effects of sleep on motor learning.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2008-09-01
description Emerging evidence suggests that sleep plays a key role in procedural learning, particularly in the continued development of motor skill learning following initial acquisition. We argue that a detailed examination of the time course of performance across sleep on the finger-tapping task, established as the paradigm for studying the effect of sleep on motor learning, will help distinguish a restorative role of sleep in motor skill learning from a proactive one. Healthy subjects rehearsed for 12 trials and, following a night of sleep, were tested. Early training rapidly improved speed as well as accuracy on pre-sleep training. Additional rehearsal caused a marked slow-down in further improvement or partial reversal in performance to observed levels below theoretical upper limits derived on the basis of early pre-sleep rehearsal. This decrement in learning efficacy does not occur always, but if and only if it does, overnight sleep has an effect in fully or partly restoring the efficacy and actual performance to the optimal theoretically achieveable level. Our findings re-interpret the sleep-dependent memory enhancement in motor learning reported in the literature as a restoration of fatigued circuitry specialized for the skill. In providing restitution to the fatigued brain, sleep eliminates the rehearsal-induced synaptic fatigue of the circuitry specialized for the task and restores the benefit of early pre-sleep rehearsal. The present findings lend support to the notion that latent sleep-dependent enhancement of performance is a behavioral expression of the brain's restitution in sleep.
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/pmid/18787652/?tool=EBI
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