The effect of sleep and semantic information on associative novel word learning.

IF 2.2 3区 心理学 Q2 PSYCHOLOGY, EXPERIMENTAL
Emma A E Schimke, Anthony J Angwin, Sjaan R Gomersall, David A Copland
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

This study investigated the effect of overnight sleep on associative novel word learning and examined whether the effects of sleep on word learning are modulated by the provision of semantic information. Seventy-five healthy young adults attended an initial word-learning session followed by a delayed testing session. An interval of overnight sleep (sleep group) or daytime wakefulness (wake group) separated the two sessions. At the initial learning session, participants learned three-word names of 20 novel objects, where half the names comprised a novel word and two semantic attributes (semantic condition), and half comprised a novel word and two meaningless proper names (name condition). Novel word cued-recall was measured at both the initial and the delayed session. Although both groups demonstrated similar cued-recall accuracy at the first session, by the delayed session the sleep group demonstrated superior cued-recall accuracy compared to the wake group. There was no influence of semantics on the sleep-dependent consolidation of the novel words. Overall, these findings suggest that novel words encoded with or without the provision of semantic information can benefit from an overnight sleep period for consolidation.

睡眠和语义信息对联想生词学习的影响。
本研究探讨了夜间睡眠对联想生词学习的影响,并探讨了睡眠对生词学习的影响是否受到语义信息提供的调节。75名健康的年轻人参加了最初的单词学习课程,随后是延迟的测试课程。夜间睡眠(睡眠组)或白天清醒(清醒组)的间隔将两个阶段分开。在最初的学习阶段,参与者学习了20个新物体的三个单词的名称,其中一半的名称由一个新单词和两个语义属性组成(语义条件),一半由一个新单词和两个无意义的专有名称组成(名称条件)。在初始阶段和延迟阶段都测量了新单词线索回忆。虽然两组在第一阶段都表现出相似的线索回忆准确性,但在延迟阶段,睡眠组比清醒组表现出更高的线索回忆准确性。语义学对新单词的睡眠依赖性巩固没有影响。总的来说,这些发现表明,无论是否提供语义信息,新单词编码都可以从过夜的睡眠巩固中受益。
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来源期刊
Memory
Memory PSYCHOLOGY, EXPERIMENTAL-
CiteScore
3.50
自引率
9.50%
发文量
79
期刊介绍: Memory publishes high quality papers in all areas of memory research. This includes experimental studies of memory (including laboratory-based research, everyday memory studies, and applied memory research), developmental, educational, neuropsychological, clinical and social research on memory. By representing all significant areas of memory research, the journal cuts across the traditional distinctions of psychological research. Memory therefore provides a unique venue for memory researchers to communicate their findings and ideas both to peers within their own research tradition in the study of memory, and also to the wider range of research communities with direct interest in human memory.
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