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View Full Version : A Lesson in Sleep Learning



Silvr
27th August 2012, 10:02
I thought this was pretty cool


Is sleep learning possible? A new Weizmann Institute study appearing today in Nature Neuroscience (http://www.nature.com/neuro/index.html) online has found that if certain odors are presented after tones during sleep, people will start sniffing when they hear the tones alone – even when no odor is present – both during sleep and, later, when awake. In other words, people can learn new information while they sleep, and this can unconsciously modify their waking behavior.


Sleep-learning experiments are notoriously difficult to conduct. For one thing, one must be sure that the subjects are actually asleep and stay that way during the “lessons.” The most rigorous trials of verbal sleep learning have failed to show any new knowledge taking root. While more and more research has demonstrated the importance of sleep for learning and memory consolidation, none had managed to show actual learning of new information taking place in an adult brain during sleep.


In the experiments, the subjects slept in a special lab while their sleep state was continuously monitored. (Waking up during the conditioning – even for a moment – disqualified the results.) As they slept, a tone was played, followed by an odor – either pleasant or unpleasant. Then another tone was played, followed by an odor at the opposite end of the pleasantness scale. Over the course of the night, the associations were partially reinforced, so that the subject was exposed to just the tones as well. The sleeping volunteers reacted to the tones alone as if the associated odor were still present – by either sniffing deeply or taking shallow breaths.


The next day, the now awake subjects again heard the tones alone – with no accompanying odor. Although they had no conscious recollection of listening to them during the night, their breathing patterns told a different story. When exposed to tones that had been paired with pleasant odors, they sniffed deeply, while the second tones – those associated with bad smells – provoked short, shallow sniffs.


The team then asked whether this type of learning is tied to a particular phase of sleep. In a second experiment, they divided the sleep cycles into rapid eye movement (REM) and non-REM sleep, and then induced the conditioning during only one phase or the other. Surprisingly, they found that the learned response was more pronounced during the REM phase, but the transfer of the association from sleep to waking was evident only when learning took place during the non-REM phase. Sobel and Arzi suggest that during REM sleep we may be more open to influence from the stimuli in our surroundings, but so-called “dream amnesia” – which makes us forget most of our dreams – may operate on any conditioning occurring in that stage of sleep. In contrast, non-REM sleep is the phase that is important for memory consolidation, so it might also play a role in this form of sleep-learning.


Although Sobel’s lab studies the sense of smell, Arzi intends to continue investigating brain processing in altered states of consciousness such as sleep and coma. “Now that we know that some kind of sleep learning is possible,” says Arzi, “we want to find where the limits lie – what information can be learned during sleep and what information cannot.”



Prof. Noam Sobel’s research is supported by Regina Wachter, NY; the estate of Lore Lennon; the James S. McDonnell Foundation 21st Century Science Scholar in Understanding Human Cognition Program; the Minerva Foundation; and the European Research Council.

wis-wander.weizmann.ac.il/a-lesson-in-sleep-learning#.UDoZVcFmT5w

ÑóẊîöʼn
27th August 2012, 11:45
Interesting, but I don't think I can learn stuff by playing lectures in my sleep...

Silvr
28th August 2012, 00:32
Yeah, they said verbal sleep learning trials had failed.

Silvr
28th August 2012, 00:56
Man, that is not the kind of sleep learning they are talking about. Why comment if you didn't even read the article.

ÑóẊîöʼn
28th August 2012, 03:36
Man, that is not the kind of sleep learning they are talking about. Why comment if you didn't even read the article.

I did read the article actually. My point was that while these results are vaguely interesting, they don't really point the way in terms of learning how or if we can acquire memories of abstract concepts, rather than mere smells, during our sleep.

Silvr
28th August 2012, 03:52
That comment had actually been in response to someone who had posted directly above it, but apparently has since deleted their comment.