Women Fitness

Women Fitness is an exhaustive resource on exercise for women, workouts for women, strength training, Zumba, HIIT, weight loss, workout, fitness tips, yoga, pregnancy.

  • 150 countries
  • Site Map
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Health & Fitness
  • Celebrities
  • News
  • Digital Magazine
  • Shopping
  • Print Magazine
    • Follow
    • Subscribe

Other

Sleep Makes Relearning Faster And Long-Lasting

August 23, 2016 By Namita Nayyar (Editor in chief)

Sleep

Getting some sleep in between study sessions may make it easier to recall what you studied and relearn what you’ve forgotten, even 6 months later, according to new findings from Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science.

“Our results suggest that interleaving sleep between practice sessions leads to a twofold advantage, reducing the time spent relearning and ensuring a much better long-term retention than practice alone,” explains psychological scientist Stephanie Mazza of the University of Lyon. “Previous research suggested that sleeping after learning is definitely a good strategy, but now we show that sleeping between two learning sessions greatly improves such a strategy.”

While studies have shown that both repeated practice and sleep can help improve memory, there is little research investigating how repetition and sleep influence memory when they are combined. Mazza and colleagues hypothesized that sleeping in between study sessions might make the relearning process more efficient, reducing the effort needed to commit information to memory.

A total of 40 French adults were randomly assigned to either a “sleep” group or a “wake” group. At the first session, all participants were presented with 16 French-Swahili word pairs in random order. After studying a pair for 7 seconds, the Swahili word appeared and participants were prompted to type the French translation. The correct word pair was then shown for 4 seconds. Any words that were not correctly translated were presented again, until each word pair had been correctly translated.

Twelve hours after the initial session, the participants completed the recall task again, practicing the whole list of words until all 16 words were correctly translated.

Importantly, some participants completed the first session in the morning and the second session in the evening of the same day (“wake” group); others completed the first session in the evening, slept, and completed the second session the following morning (“sleep” group).

In the first session, the two groups showed no difference in how many words they could initially recall or in the number of trials they needed to be able to remember all 16 word pairs.

But after 12 hours, the data told another story: Participants who had slept between sessions recalled about 10 of the 16 words, on average, while those who hadn’t slept recalled only about 7.5 words. And when it came to relearning, those who had slept needed only about 3 trials to be able to recall all 16 words, while those who had stayed awake needed about 6 trials.

Ultimately, both groups were able to learn all 16 word pairs, but sleeping in between sessions seemed to allow participants to do so in less time and with less effort.

“Memories that were not explicitly accessible at the beginning of relearning appeared to have been transformed by sleep in some way,” says Mazza. “Such transformation allowed subjects to re-encode information faster and to save time during the relearning session.”

The memory boost that participants got from sleeping between sessions seemed to last over time. Follow-up data showed that participants in the sleep group outperformed their peers on the recall test 1 week later. The sleep group showed very little forgetting, recalling about 15 word pairs, compared to the wake group, who were able to recall about 11 word pairs. This benefit was still noticeable 6 months later.

The benefits of sleep could not be ascribed to participants’ sleep quality or sleepiness, or to their short-term or long-term memory capacity, as the two groups showed no differences on these measures.

The results suggest that alternating study sessions with sleep might be an easy and effective way to remember information over longer periods of time with less study, Mazza and colleagues conclude.

News

  • Alternative Health
  • Arthritis
  • Asthma & Allergies
  • Breast Cancer
  • Cancer
  • Cardiovascular Health
  • Diabetes
  • Fertility & Pregnancy
  • Nutrition & Wellness
  • Orthopedics
  • Sports & Medicine
  • Weight Management
  • Women Beauty
  • Women Health
  • Other

Digital Magazine Sign-Up

Digital Magazine Available On

Available On Readly App

Available On Magzter

Advertise With Us











  • facebook
  • Twitter
  • Linkedin
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram

JOIN WF

  • Advertise With Us
  • Digital Magazine

Absolutely Free

  • WF Categories
  • Low Calorie Recipes
  • Calorie Catch
  • WF Entertainment

All About Us

  • About Namita
  • Team
  • Testimonials
  • Contact Us

© by Womenfitness.net 1999–2025. All rights reserved.

All Categories

  • What’s New
  • Weight Loss
    • Obesity
    • Low Calorie Recipes
    • Real Weight Loss Stories
    • Daily Tip
    • Fitness Analysis
    • Motivation of the Day
  • Exercise
    • Body building
    • Fitness for Models
    • Target Abs
    • Women At 40
    • Motivation Point
  • Healthy Eating
    • Calorie Catch
    • Disease Management
    • Good health
    • Herbs
  • Beauty & Fashion
    • Eye Care
    • Hair Care
    • Hand & Foot Care
    • Make Up
    • Skin Care
    • Beauty Tip
  • Celebrities
    • Actresses
    • Fitness Trainers
    • Sportswomen
    • Celebrity List
  • Pregnancy
    • Fertility & Conception
    • Health During Pregnancy
    • Getting Back to Normal
    • Problems in Pregnancy
    • Sexual Health
  • Yoga
    • Beauty & Yoga
    • Yoga during Pregnancy
    • Meditation Point
    • The Yogic Diet
    • Weight loss Yoga
    • Yog – Asanas
    • Yoga & Disease Management
    • Yoga in Action
  • Contact
    • About Namita
    • Our Team
    • Advertize with Us
    • FAQ
    • Message Board
    • Contact Us
  • Shopping
    • Book & Mag. Store
    • Fitness Apparels
    • Fitness Music
    • Fitness Dvd’s
    • Maternity Store
    • Sports & Outdoors
    • Health Care Store
    • Natural Health Foods
    • Herbs & Spices
    • Beauty Shop
    • Jewelry Store
    • Flowers
    • Health Care Equip.
    • Diet & Nutrition
    • Health Mobile Apps
    • Sex Lubes Store
  • Fitness Components
    • Flexibility
    • Cardiovascular
    • Weight Management
    • Nutrition
    • Strength Training
  • More
    • Testimonials
    • WF Links
    • Privacy Policy
    • Site Map
    • Disclaimer
    • News
    • Member’s Area
    • Reviews

Follow

  • facebook
  • Twitter
  • Linkedin
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram
Go to mobile version