Wednesday, May 29, 2024
ADVT 
Health

Sleep well to Learn Well

Darpan News Desk Darpan, 06 Jun, 2014 04:14 PM
  • Sleep well to Learn Well
You must have heard and read that sleep helps strengthen and consolidate memories. Now, researchers show how it works.
 
Sleep after learning encourages the growth of dendritic spines - the tiny protrusions from brain cells that connect to other brain cells and facilitate the passage of information across synapses.
 
Moreover, the activity of brain cells during deep sleep, or slow-wave sleep, after learning is critical for such growth, say researchers from NYU Langone Medical Centre, New York.
 
The findings in mice show for the first time how learning and sleep cause physical changes in the motor cortex, a brain region responsible for voluntary movements.
 
“Here, we have shown how sleep helps neurons form very specific connections on dendritic branches that may facilitate long-term memory. Learning causes very specific structural changes in the brain,” said senior investigator Wen-Biao Gan.
 
Using a special laser-scanning microscope that illuminates the glowing fluorescent proteins in the motor cortex, the scientists tracked and took images of dendritic spines along individual branches of dendrites before and after mice learned to balance on a spin rod.
 
Over time, mice learned how to balance on the rod as it gradually spun faster. 
 
Researchers trained two sets of mice: one trained on the spinning rod for an hour and then slept for seven hours.
 
The second trained for the same period of time on the rod but stayed awake for seven hours.
 
The scientists found that the sleep-deprived mice experienced significantly less dendritic spine growth than the well-rested mice.
 
Furthermore, they found that the type of task learned determined which dendritic branches spines would grow, said the study published in the journal Science.

MORE Health ARTICLES

New blood test may accurately detect tuberculosis

New blood test may accurately detect tuberculosis
Tuberculosis (TB), that often dodges physicians, can now be precisely detected with a new blood test that can eliminate more than 50 percent of the procedure that goes into detecting the disease.

New blood test may accurately detect tuberculosis

Father's drinking habits may impact son's genes

Father's drinking habits may impact son's genes
Do you regularly drink to excess? Even before conception, a son's vulnerability for alcohol use disorders could be shaped by a father who chronically drinks to excess, a significant study indicates.

Father's drinking habits may impact son's genes

App that helps tackle stress in parents

App that helps tackle stress in parents
If you are a parent and have to deal with kids who give you the jitters, this App is designed for you.

App that helps tackle stress in parents

Does practice make you perfect? Meditation does

Does practice make you perfect? Meditation does
Creativity depends on greater brain integration and transcendental meditation could help achieve this, a new study has found.  

Does practice make you perfect? Meditation does

Stop marijuana use to boost fertility: Study

Stop marijuana use to boost fertility: Study
Planning to start a family? Stop using marijuana now as cannabis use may put your fertility at risk, especially if you are young.

Stop marijuana use to boost fertility: Study

Divorce may end in obese kids!

Divorce may end in obese kids!
Children, whose parents are divorced or not married but living together, are at a higher risk of obesity, a study has found.

Divorce may end in obese kids!