4.8 Article

Newborn infants learn during sleep

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1005061107

Keywords

EEG; eyelid conditioning; neonate

Funding

  1. Sackler Institute of Developmental Psychobiology at Columbia University
  2. National Institutes of Health [R37 HD032774, T32 MH018264, R01 MH068073]

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Newborn infants must rapidly adjust their physiology and behavior to the specific demands of the novel postnatal environment. This adaptation depends, at least in part, on the infant's ability to learn from experiences. We report here that infants exhibit learning even while asleep. Bioelectrical activity from face and scalp electrodes was recorded from neonates during an eye movement conditioning procedure in which a tone was followed by a puff of air to the eye. Sleeping newborns rapidly learned the predictive relationship between the tone and the puff. Additionally, in the latter part of training, these infants exhibited a frontally maximum positive EEG slow wave possibly reflecting memory updating. As newborns spend most of their time sleeping, the ability to learn about external stimuli in the postnatal environment during non-awake states may be crucial for rapid adaptation and infant survival. Furthermore, because eyelid conditioning reflects functional cerebellar circuitry, this method potentially offers a unique approach for early identification of infants at risk for a range of developmental disorders including autism and dyslexia.

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