FRIDAY, July 2 (HealthDay News) -- Sleep helps you remember something
you want to do tomorrow or at some other point in the future, according to
a new study.
A series of tests involving 24 university students found that students
who slept after processing and storing the idea of a planned task were
more likely to carry out their intentions than those who tried to tackle
their plan before going to sleep.
They also found that the ability to follow through on a planned action
isn't so much a function of how firmly that intention is embedded in the
memory. It's actually a place, situation or circumstance encountered the
next day that triggers a person's recall of their intended action.
This skill, called prospective memory, includes such things as
remembering to take medicines, buy a "Happy Anniversary" card, or bring
ice cream home for a birthday party, explained the researchers at
Washington University in St. Louis in a news release.
They believe that the prospective memory process occurs during slow
wave sleep (an early pattern in the sleep cycle) and involves
communication between the brain's hippocampus (which plays a critical role
in memory formation) and its cortical regions (which are key to memory
storage).
"We believe that during slow wave sleep the hippocampus is reactivating
these recently learned memories, taking them up and placing them in
long-term storage regions in the brain. The physiology of slow wave sleep
seems very conducive to this kind of memory strengthening," Michael
Scullin, a doctoral candidate in psychology, said in a university news
release.
The study is published online in the journal Psychological
Science.
More information
Helpguide.org offers tips for improving your memory.
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