2011
DOI: 10.1016/j.sleep.2010.07.017
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Sleep restriction over several days does not affect long-term recall of declarative and procedural memories in adolescents

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Cited by 74 publications
(66 citation statements)
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“…Although time in SWS did not differ between the groups, a significant positive correlation between slow oscillation power during non-REM sleep was only observed in the healthy children, possibly reflecting impaired functionality of this rhythm in ADHD children. In 14-to 16-yr-old adolescents, the restriction of sleep (to up to 5 h for 4 consecutive nights) did not impair either retention of word pairs or procedural memories for mirror tracing skill (1259). However, the adolescents showed a remarkable increase in the proportion of SWS during the restriction period, suggesting a high capability of the adolescent's brain to compensate effects of sleep restriction by flexibly increasing the sleep depth.…”
Section: Consolidation Of Declarative Memorymentioning
confidence: 85%
“…Although time in SWS did not differ between the groups, a significant positive correlation between slow oscillation power during non-REM sleep was only observed in the healthy children, possibly reflecting impaired functionality of this rhythm in ADHD children. In 14-to 16-yr-old adolescents, the restriction of sleep (to up to 5 h for 4 consecutive nights) did not impair either retention of word pairs or procedural memories for mirror tracing skill (1259). However, the adolescents showed a remarkable increase in the proportion of SWS during the restriction period, suggesting a high capability of the adolescent's brain to compensate effects of sleep restriction by flexibly increasing the sleep depth.…”
Section: Consolidation Of Declarative Memorymentioning
confidence: 85%
“…The comparable effect size of PSD on false memory formation in adolescents and young adults, despite the preservation of stage N3 sleep, challenges the notion that adolescents' memory can remain resilient to substantial sleep curtailment as long as the amount of slow wave sleep is not reduced (Voderholzer et al ., 2011). Furthermore, in a sleep‐deprived state, adolescents are as vulnerable as young adults to the interfering effects of misleading post‐event information.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While this might seem surprising, our results are consistent with a similar study by Voderholzer et al . (2011), who showed that sleep restriction (with adolescents obtaining as little as 5 h of nocturnal sleep) during four consecutive nights did not impact declarative or procedural memory consolidation significantly. It was suggested that preservation of N3 duration in the sleep‐restricted conditions protected these participants from memory impairment.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%