International audienceIn young adults, sleeping after learning has been shown to facilitate relearning and long-term retention, compared to staying awake (Mazza et al., in revision). Children (aged 8) and elderly people (aged 71) learned Swahili-French word pairs to criterion during a learning session taking place in the morning or evening (Wake and Sleep group, respectively). Participants spent 12 hours filled with wakefulness or a night of sleep, then performed a relearning session to criterion either in the evening (Wake) or the following morning (Sleep). One week later, retention was tested. Sleep appeared to affect memory differently according to age. The groups of children did not differ during the relearning session whereas the Sleep...
The present research investigated the relationship between sleep and memory in younger and older adu...
Although sleep facilitates procedural memory consolidation in young adults, such beneficial effects ...
This article examines adult learning and sleep habits. It is commonly assumed that learning occurs d...
International audienceIn young adults, sleeping after learning has been shown to facilitate relearni...
International audienceHow sleep affects memory in older adults is a critical topic, since age signif...
Contains fulltext : 231782.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Open Access)STUDY OBJECTIVE...
Across the lifespan, learners capitalize on regularities in language to find words in fluent speech ...
Studies indicate that a brief period of wakeful rest after learning supports memory retention, where...
A period of post-learning sleep benefits memory consolidation compared with an equal-length wake int...
A period of post-learning sleep benefits memory consolidation compared with an equal-length wake int...
Several studies have consistently shown that pre-sleep learning is associated to changes of sleep st...
International audienceProspective memory (PM) refers to our ability to perform actions at the approp...
International audienceMemories are not stored as they were initially encoded but rather undergo a gr...
The architecture of sleep and the functional neuroanatomical networks subtending memory consolidatio...
Sleep has been shown to foster the process of insight generation in young adults during problem solv...
The present research investigated the relationship between sleep and memory in younger and older adu...
Although sleep facilitates procedural memory consolidation in young adults, such beneficial effects ...
This article examines adult learning and sleep habits. It is commonly assumed that learning occurs d...
International audienceIn young adults, sleeping after learning has been shown to facilitate relearni...
International audienceHow sleep affects memory in older adults is a critical topic, since age signif...
Contains fulltext : 231782.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Open Access)STUDY OBJECTIVE...
Across the lifespan, learners capitalize on regularities in language to find words in fluent speech ...
Studies indicate that a brief period of wakeful rest after learning supports memory retention, where...
A period of post-learning sleep benefits memory consolidation compared with an equal-length wake int...
A period of post-learning sleep benefits memory consolidation compared with an equal-length wake int...
Several studies have consistently shown that pre-sleep learning is associated to changes of sleep st...
International audienceProspective memory (PM) refers to our ability to perform actions at the approp...
International audienceMemories are not stored as they were initially encoded but rather undergo a gr...
The architecture of sleep and the functional neuroanatomical networks subtending memory consolidatio...
Sleep has been shown to foster the process of insight generation in young adults during problem solv...
The present research investigated the relationship between sleep and memory in younger and older adu...
Although sleep facilitates procedural memory consolidation in young adults, such beneficial effects ...
This article examines adult learning and sleep habits. It is commonly assumed that learning occurs d...