From incidental learning to explicit memory: The role of sleep after exposure to a serial reaction time task

This laboratory study explores whether sleep has different effects on explicit (recognition-based) and implicit (priming-based) memory. Eighty-nine healthy participants were randomly assigned to one of two experimental conditions: sleep or wake. All participants were previously exposed to an inciden...

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Main Authors: Johanna Sánchez-Mora, Ricardo M. Tamayo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2021-06-01
Series:Acta Psychologica
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0001691821000755
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spelling doaj-a3dbb8187ae44b06962cb0a0cda2e2f22021-05-30T04:40:00ZengElsevierActa Psychologica0001-69182021-06-01217103325From incidental learning to explicit memory: The role of sleep after exposure to a serial reaction time taskJohanna Sánchez-Mora0Ricardo M. Tamayo1Departamento de Psicología, Universidad Nacional de Colombia, Bogotá, ColombiaCorresponding author.; Departamento de Psicología, Universidad Nacional de Colombia, Bogotá, ColombiaThis laboratory study explores whether sleep has different effects on explicit (recognition-based) and implicit (priming-based) memory. Eighty-nine healthy participants were randomly assigned to one of two experimental conditions: sleep or wake. All participants were previously exposed to an incidental learning session involving a 12-element deterministic second-order conditional sequence embedded in a serial reaction time task. The participants' explicit and implicit knowledge was assessed both immediately after the learning session (pretest) and after 12 h (posttest). For the sleep group, participants had a night of normal sleep between pretest and posttest, whereas the wake group spent 12 h awake during the day. The measures involved an explicit recognition test and an implicit priming reaction-time test with old fragments from a previously learned sequence and new fragments of a different control sequence. The sleep group showed statistically significant improvement between the pretest and the posttest in the explicit memory measure, whereas the wake group did not. In the implicit task, both groups improved similarly after a 12-h retention interval. These results suggest that throughout sleep, implicitly acquired information is processed offline to yield an explicit representation of knowledge incidentally acquired the night before.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0001691821000755Implicit memoryExplicit memoryDissociationCooperationSleepSerial reaction time task
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Johanna Sánchez-Mora
Ricardo M. Tamayo
spellingShingle Johanna Sánchez-Mora
Ricardo M. Tamayo
From incidental learning to explicit memory: The role of sleep after exposure to a serial reaction time task
Acta Psychologica
Implicit memory
Explicit memory
Dissociation
Cooperation
Sleep
Serial reaction time task
author_facet Johanna Sánchez-Mora
Ricardo M. Tamayo
author_sort Johanna Sánchez-Mora
title From incidental learning to explicit memory: The role of sleep after exposure to a serial reaction time task
title_short From incidental learning to explicit memory: The role of sleep after exposure to a serial reaction time task
title_full From incidental learning to explicit memory: The role of sleep after exposure to a serial reaction time task
title_fullStr From incidental learning to explicit memory: The role of sleep after exposure to a serial reaction time task
title_full_unstemmed From incidental learning to explicit memory: The role of sleep after exposure to a serial reaction time task
title_sort from incidental learning to explicit memory: the role of sleep after exposure to a serial reaction time task
publisher Elsevier
series Acta Psychologica
issn 0001-6918
publishDate 2021-06-01
description This laboratory study explores whether sleep has different effects on explicit (recognition-based) and implicit (priming-based) memory. Eighty-nine healthy participants were randomly assigned to one of two experimental conditions: sleep or wake. All participants were previously exposed to an incidental learning session involving a 12-element deterministic second-order conditional sequence embedded in a serial reaction time task. The participants' explicit and implicit knowledge was assessed both immediately after the learning session (pretest) and after 12 h (posttest). For the sleep group, participants had a night of normal sleep between pretest and posttest, whereas the wake group spent 12 h awake during the day. The measures involved an explicit recognition test and an implicit priming reaction-time test with old fragments from a previously learned sequence and new fragments of a different control sequence. The sleep group showed statistically significant improvement between the pretest and the posttest in the explicit memory measure, whereas the wake group did not. In the implicit task, both groups improved similarly after a 12-h retention interval. These results suggest that throughout sleep, implicitly acquired information is processed offline to yield an explicit representation of knowledge incidentally acquired the night before.
topic Implicit memory
Explicit memory
Dissociation
Cooperation
Sleep
Serial reaction time task
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0001691821000755
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