Posted on 10/22/2007 11:41:01 PM PDT by neverdem
The task looks as simple as a Sesame Street exercise. Study pairs of Easter eggs on a computer screen and memorize how the computer has arranged them: the aqua egg over the rainbow one, the paisley over the coral one and there are just six eggs in all.
Most people can study these pairs for about 20 minutes and ace a test on them, even a day later. But theyre much less accurate in choosing between two eggs that have not been directly compared: Aqua trumped rainbow but does that mean it trumps paisley? Its hazy.
Its hazy, that is, until you sleep on it.
In a study published in May, researchers at Harvard and McGill Universities reported that participants who slept after playing this game scored significantly higher on a retest than those who did not sleep. While asleep they apparently figured out what they didnt while awake: the structure of the simple hierarchy that linked the pairs, paisley over aqua over rainbow, and so on.
We think whats happening during sleep is that you open the aperture of memory and are able to see this bigger picture, said the studys senior author, Matthew Walker, a neuroscientist who is now at the University of California, Berkeley. He added that many such insights occurred only when you enter this wonder-world of sleep.
Scientists have been trying to determine why people need sleep for more than 100 years. They have not learned much more than what every new parent quickly finds out: sleep loss makes you more reckless, more emotionally fragile, less able to concentrate and almost certainly more vulnerable to infection. They know, too, that some people get by on as few as three hours a night, even less, and that there are hearty souls who have stayed up...
(Excerpt) Read more at nytimes.com ...
My wife maintains that one reason education is in trouble is that children don’t have set and enforced bedtimes.
Isn’t it funny how science isn’t settled on complex issues; unless it’s global warming, of course.
I proposed putting a bunch of liberals into MRI scanners in order to definitively study self loathing, but Harvard turned me down.
They said they hated the idea.
LOL!
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