Applying Psychology
in the 21st Century
Let Me Sleep on It: The Role of
Sleep in Memory and Thinking
“Let me sleep on it. And I’ll give you an
answer in the morning.”
As the popular song lyric suggests, lay-
people and scientists alike have long sus-
pected that sleep plays an important role in
thinking and memory—but what that role
might be has been less than clear. One idea is
that a process called memory consolidation
occurs during sleep. While we’re awake, our
brains store information from our experi-
ences throughout the day in the hippocam-
pus region. But for long term storage, those
memories need to be relocated to the cortex,
where connections are made between the
new information and what we already
know. This process helps us to make better
sense of the new information and to retain
it—and it may be facilitated by sleep, when
the infl ux of new information slows to a
trickle (Cai et al., 2009; Gilestro, Tononi, &
Cirelli, 2009).
Recent studies are shedding light on
how memory consolidation works. In one,
participants memorized a long list of word
pairs immediately before they went to
sleep. As soon as they reached the deepest
stages of sleep, researchers used electrodes
to stimulate very slow brain waves in
some of the participants. The participants
whose brain waves were altered in this
way showed better recall for the word
pairs the next morning. The researchers
theorize that these slow brain waves im-
proved memory storage by strengthening
the connections between neurons (Ver-
leger et al., 2008).
Another study showed how sleep is in-
volved in thinking as well as memory. The
researchers gave participants a puzzle that
involved performing a set of seven opera-
tions on a set of numbers, with the outcome
of the seventh operation as the fi nal answer.
The participants were given a series of
these puzzles using different number sets,
and they were instructed to fi nd the an-
swers quickly. What the participants didn’t
know was that there was a “trick” to the
puzzles: the fi nal answer was always the
same as the outcome of the second opera-
tion. If they realized this trick, they could
skip most of the work and give the fi nal an-
swer much more quickly.
The question was whether “sleeping on
it” would help participants achieve this
insight—and it did. Participants who
worked a set of puzzles before sleeping and
then worked another set the next morning
were almost three times more likely to dis-
cover the trick than were participants who
took a long break between puzzle sessions
but did not sleep (Stickgold & Wehrwein,
2009; Yordanova et al., 2008).
This, and other fi ndings like it, suggest
that sleep plays an important role in help-
ing us to analyze and make meaning of
our waking experiences. “Sleeping on it,”
then, may turn out to be a reasonable
strategy for coming to solutions for our
problems.
• Why do you think memory and thinking may be improved by sleeping?
• How could students make use of memory consolidation while sleeping to improve
their test performance?
RETHINK
Does sleeping help us to remember more
eff ectively?
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