Effects of a brief afternoon nap on declarative and procedural memory

Neurobiol Learn Mem. 2022 Oct:194:107662. doi: 10.1016/j.nlm.2022.107662. Epub 2022 Jul 21.

Abstract

The relationship between sleep and memory consolidation has not been fully revealed. The current study aimed to investigate how a brief afternoon nap contributed to the consolidation of declarative and procedural memory by exploring the relationship between sleep characteristics (i.e., the durations of sleep stages and slow oscillation, slow-wave activity, and spindle activity extracted from sleep) and task performance and the relationship between delta, theta, alpha, and beta bands extracted from wake during task performance and task performance. Twenty-three healthy young adults underwent a paired associates learning task and a sequential finger-tapping task with easy and difficult levels and were tested for memory performance before and after the intervention (i.e., an about 30-min nap or stay awake). Electroencephalogram (EEG) signals were continously recorded during the whole experiment. Results revealed that a short afternoon nap improved movement speed for the procedural memory task, regardless of the task difficulty, but unaffected the performance on the declarative memory task. Besides, the improvement in movement speed for the easy procedural memory task was positively correlated with slow-wave activity (SWA) during non-rapid-eye-movement (NREM) sleep but negatively correlated with slow oscillation and spindle activity during sleep stage 2 and NREM sleep, and the improvement in the difficult procedural memory task correlated positively with SWA during NREM sleep. Moreover, performance on the easy declarative and procedural memory tasks was negatively correlated with the relative power of alpha or theta; whereas the alpha band was positively correlated with the difficult declarative memory performance. These findings suggested that a brief afternoon nap with NREM sleep would benefit procedural memory consolidation but not declarative memory; such contribution of napping to memory consolidation would be either explained by the sleep characteristics or physiological arousal during performing tasks; task difficulty would moderate the relationship between the declarative memory performance and EEGs during task performance.

Keywords: Daytime nap; Declarative memory; Difficulty level; EEG; Procedural memory.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Humans
  • Memory Consolidation* / physiology
  • Sleep / physiology
  • Sleep Stages / physiology
  • Sleep, Slow-Wave*
  • Wakefulness / physiology
  • Young Adult