Author:
Roth Daphne Ari-Even,Kishon-Rabin Liat,Hildesheimer Minka,Karni Avi
Abstract
Large gains in performance, evolving hours after practice has terminated,
were reported in a number of visual and some motor learning tasks, as well as
recently in an auditory nonverbal discrimination task. It was proposed that
these gains reflect a latent phase of experience-triggered memory
consolidation in human skill learning. It is not clear, however, whether and
when delayed gains in performance evolve following training in an auditory
verbal identification task. Here we show that normal-hearing young adults
trained to identify consonant–vowel stimuli in increasing levels of
background noise showed significant, robust, delayed gains in performance that
became effective not earlier than 4 h post-training, with most participants
improving at more than 6 h post-training. These gains were retained for over 6
mo. Moreover, although it has been recently argued that time including sleep,
rather than time per se, is necessary for the evolution of delayed gains in
human perceptual learning, our results show that 12 h post-training in the
waking state were as effective as 12 h, including no less than 6 h night's
sleep. Altogether, the results indicate, for the first time, the existence of
a latent, hours-long, consolidation phase in a human auditory verbal learning
task, which occurs even during the awake state.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Subject
Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Cognitive Neuroscience,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology
Reference43 articles.
1. American National Standards Institute (ANSI). 1989. Specifications for audiometers, ANSI S3.6. ANSI, New York.
2. Ari-Even Roth, D., Hildesheimer, M., Kishon-Rabin, L., and Karni, A. 2003. The beneficial effect of time after practice: Evidence for a consolidation process in auditory identification learning. Satellite symposium: “Plasticity of the central auditory system and processing of complex acoustic signals” International Brain Research Organization (IBRO) 67.
3. Posttraining Sleep Enhances Automaticity in Perceptual Discrimination
4. Normal and Hearing-Impaired Word Recognition Scores for Monosyllabic Words in Quiet and Noise
Cited by
76 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献