The unique contributions of day and night sleep to infant motor problem solving

The current study sought to tease apart the unique contributions of napping and nighttime sleep to infant learning, specifically in the context of motor problem solving. We challenged 54 walking infants to solve a novel locomotor problem at three time points—training, test, and follow-up the next mo...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of experimental child psychology 2023-02, Vol.226, p.105536-105536, Article 105536
Hauptverfasser: Horger, Melissa N., DeMasi, Aaron, Allia, Angelina M., Scher, Anat, Berger, Sarah E.
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container_title Journal of experimental child psychology
container_volume 226
creator Horger, Melissa N.
DeMasi, Aaron
Allia, Angelina M.
Scher, Anat
Berger, Sarah E.
description The current study sought to tease apart the unique contributions of napping and nighttime sleep to infant learning, specifically in the context of motor problem solving. We challenged 54 walking infants to solve a novel locomotor problem at three time points—training, test, and follow-up the next morning. One group of infants napped during the delay between training and test. Another group did not sleep during the delay. A third group received the test immediately after training with no delay. Only the Nap group’s strategy choices continued to improve through the follow-up session, suggesting that daytime sleep has an active role in strengthening otherwise fragile memory. Although group did not affect strategy maintenance, walk experience did, suggesting that task difficulty may shape the impact of sleep on learning. Thus, day sleep and night sleep make independent contributions to the consolidation of motor problem-solving strategies during infancy.
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subjects Humans
Infant
Learning
Motor
Nap
Problem Solving
Sleep
Walking
title The unique contributions of day and night sleep to infant motor problem solving
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