Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5738721 Neuroscience Letters 2017 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Sleep duration predicts improvement in measures of speech sound learning.•Behavioral gains are associated with changes in ERP response magnitude overnight.•Duration of sleep determines relative success of forming new perceptual categories.

Sleep is important for memory consolidation and contributes to the formation of new perceptual categories. This study examined sleep as a source of variability in typical learners' ability to form new speech sound categories. We trained monolingual English speakers to identify a set of non-native speech sounds at 8PM, and assessed their ability to identify and discriminate between these sounds immediately after training, and at 8AM on the following day. We tracked sleep duration overnight, and found that light sleep duration predicted gains in identification performance, while total sleep duration predicted gains in discrimination ability. Participants obtained an average of less than 6 h of sleep, pointing to the degree of sleep deprivation as a potential factor. Behavioral measures were associated with ERP indexes of neural sensitivity to the learned contrast. These results demonstrate that the relative success in forming new perceptual categories depends on the duration of post-training sleep.

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