首页> 美国卫生研究院文献>Learning Memory >Insufficient chunk concatenation may underlie changes in sleep-dependent consolidation of motor sequence learning in older adults
【2h】

Insufficient chunk concatenation may underlie changes in sleep-dependent consolidation of motor sequence learning in older adults

机译:块级联不足可能是老年人运动序列学习的睡眠依赖性巩固改变的基础

代理获取
本网站仅为用户提供外文OA文献查询和代理获取服务,本网站没有原文。下单后我们将采用程序或人工为您竭诚获取高质量的原文,但由于OA文献来源多样且变更频繁,仍可能出现获取不到、文献不完整或与标题不符等情况,如果获取不到我们将提供退款服务。请知悉。
获取外文期刊封面目录资料

摘要

Sleep enhances motor sequence learning (MSL) in young adults by concatenating subsequences (“chunks”) formed during skill acquisition. To examine whether this process is reduced in aging, we assessed performance changes on the MSL task following overnight sleep or daytime wake in healthy young and older adults. Young adult performance enhancement was correlated with nREM2 sleep, and facilitated by preferential improvement of slowest within-sequence transitions. This effect was markedly reduced in older adults, and accompanied by diminished sigma power density (12–15 Hz) during nREM2 sleep, suggesting that diminished chunk concatenation following sleep may underlie reduced consolidation of MSL in older adults.
机译:睡眠通过连接技能获得过程中形成的子序列(“块”)来增强年轻人的运动序列学习(MSL)。为了检查该过程是否随着年龄的增长而减少,我们评估了健康的年轻人和老年人在通宵睡眠或白天醒来后MSL任务的性能变化。年轻成年人的表现增强与nREM2睡眠相关,并通过优先改善最慢的序列内过渡而得到促进。这种作用在老年人中明显降低,并伴有nREM2睡眠期间sigma功率密度(12-15 Hz)的降低,这表明睡眠后大块级联的减少可能是老年人MSL巩固减少的基础。

著录项

相似文献

  • 外文文献
  • 中文文献
  • 专利
代理获取

客服邮箱:kefu@zhangqiaokeyan.com

京公网安备:11010802029741号 ICP备案号:京ICP备15016152号-6 六维联合信息科技 (北京) 有限公司©版权所有
  • 客服微信

  • 服务号