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The sleeping child outplays the adult's capacity to convert implicit into explicit knowledge.

by: Ines Wilhelm, Michael Rose, Kathrin I. Imhof, Bjöern Rasch, Christian Büechel, Jan Born
Nature neuroscience, Vol. advance online publication (24 February 2013), doi:10.1038/nn.3343  Key: citeulike:12072390

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Abstract

When sleep followed implicit training on a motor sequence, children showed greater gains in explicit sequence knowledge after sleep than adults. This greater explicit knowledge in children was linked to their higher sleep slow-wave activity and to stronger hippocampal activation at explicit knowledge retrieval. Our data indicate the superiority of children in extracting invariant features from complex environments, possibly as a result of enhanced reprocessing of hippocampal memory representations during slow-wave sleep.


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