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Sleep Promotes the Extraction of Grammatical Rules

Overview of attention for article published in PLOS ONE, June 2013
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Title
Sleep Promotes the Extraction of Grammatical Rules
Published in
PLOS ONE, June 2013
DOI 10.1371/journal.pone.0065046
Pubmed ID
Authors

Ingrid L. C. Nieuwenhuis, Vasiliki Folia, Christian Forkstam, Ole Jensen, Karl Magnus Petersson

Abstract

Grammar acquisition is a high level cognitive function that requires the extraction of complex rules. While it has been proposed that offline time might benefit this type of rule extraction, this remains to be tested. Here, we addressed this question using an artificial grammar learning paradigm. During a short-term memory cover task, eighty-one human participants were exposed to letter sequences generated according to an unknown artificial grammar. Following a time delay of 15 min, 12 h (wake or sleep) or 24 h, participants classified novel test sequences as Grammatical or Non-Grammatical. Previous behavioral and functional neuroimaging work has shown that classification can be guided by two distinct underlying processes: (1) the holistic abstraction of the underlying grammar rules and (2) the detection of sequence chunks that appear at varying frequencies during exposure. Here, we show that classification performance improved after sleep. Moreover, this improvement was due to an enhancement of rule abstraction, while the effect of chunk frequency was unaltered by sleep. These findings suggest that sleep plays a critical role in extracting complex structure from separate but related items during integrative memory processing. Our findings stress the importance of alternating periods of learning with sleep in settings in which complex information must be acquired.

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Geographical breakdown

Country Count As %
Netherlands 2 2%
United States 2 2%
France 1 <1%
United Kingdom 1 <1%
Brazil 1 <1%
Unknown 102 94%

Demographic breakdown

Readers by professional status Count As %
Student > Ph. D. Student 29 27%
Student > Master 15 14%
Student > Bachelor 10 9%
Researcher 9 8%
Student > Postgraduate 5 5%
Other 21 19%
Unknown 20 18%
Readers by discipline Count As %
Psychology 36 33%
Linguistics 10 9%
Neuroscience 10 9%
Agricultural and Biological Sciences 8 7%
Medicine and Dentistry 6 6%
Other 13 12%
Unknown 26 24%