4.5 Article

Sleep and Second-Language Acquisition Revisited: The Role of Sleep Spindles and Rapid Eye Movements

Journal

NATURE AND SCIENCE OF SLEEP
Volume 13, Issue -, Pages 1887-1902

Publisher

DOVE MEDICAL PRESS LTD
DOI: 10.2147/NSS.S326151

Keywords

memory consolidation; procedural memory; declarative memory; learning; theta; language

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council (NSERC)
  2. Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC)
  3. NSERC graduate scholarship

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This study found that language learning involves different memory systems in the early and late stages, with early SLL relying on declarative memory and late SLL shifting to procedural memory. Increases in sleep spindle characteristics were associated with early SLL, while increases in REM activity were associated with late SLL.
Introduction: Second-language learning (SLL) depends on distinct functional-neuroanatomical systems including procedural and declarative long-term memory. Characteristic features of rapid eye movement (REM) and non-REM sleep such as rapid eye movements and sleep spindles are electrophysiological markers of cognitively complex procedural and declarative memory consolidation, respectively. In adults, grammatical learn-ing depends at first on declarative memory (early SLL) then shifts to procedural memory with experience (late SLL). However, it is unknown if the shift from declarative to procedural memory in early vs late SLL is supported by sleep. Here, we hypothesized that increases in sleep spindle characteristics would be associated with early SLL, whereas increases in REM activity (eg, density and EEG theta-band activity time-locked to rapid eye movements) would be associated with late SLL. Methods: Eight Anglophone (English first language) participants completed four polysom-nographic recordings throughout an intensive 6-week French immersion course. Sleep spindle data and electroencephalographic spectral power time-locked to rapid eye move-ments were extracted from parietal temporal electrodes. Results: As predicted, improvements in French proficiency were associated with changes in spindles during early SLL. Furthermore, we observed increased event-related theta power time -locked to rapid eye movements during late SLL compared with early SLL. The increases in theta power were significantly correlated with improvements in French proficiency. Discussion: This supports the notion that sleep spindles are involved in early SLL when grammar depends on declarative memory, whereas cortical theta activity time-locked to rapid eye movements is involved in late SLL when grammar depends on procedural memory.

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