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nomad soul

Joined: 31 Jan 2010 Posts: 11454 Location: The real world
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Posted: Wed Jul 02, 2014 4:38 am Post subject: Can a new language be learned during sleep? |
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We can learn new languages while we sleep
by Liat Clark, Wired UK | 30 June 2014
Source: http://www.wired.co.uk/news/archive/2014-06/30/learn-languages-while-you-sleep
Listening to other languages while you sleep help reinforce learning, a team of Swiss psychologists has found. Writing in the journal Cerebral Cortex, a team from the Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF) led by biopsychologist Björn Rasch explains how the technique helps reactivate memories in order to consolidate them. "Here, we tested for the first time whether verbal cueing during sleep can improve vocabulary learning."
Sixty German-speaking student volunteers were asked to sit and learn a series of Dutch words for the first time at around 10pm. Half were asked to then go to sleep, still under lab conditions, while the other half had to stay up. While the former were in non-rapid eye movement sleep, those same words they learned at 10pm were played back to them. The other group also had the words played back to them while they were awake.
The sleep deprived stayed up, and at 2am the sleeping group were woken and everyone was tested on the same group of words. Despite only hearing the Dutch words in their sleep, the students that got some shut eye could remember the German translation better than the group forced to stay awake. In fact the playback appeared to have no effect on those that were up all night. "Verbal cueing failed to improve memory during active and passive waking," write the authors.
It is, of course, entirely reasonable to assume that sleep depravation versus rest played a part in the results. However, the team accounted for this by also taking EEG recordings -- they measured the electrical activity in the brain as the volunteers listened back to the recordings while they slept. They found there was "a pronounced frontal negativity in event-related potentials, a higher frequency of frontal slow waves as well as a cueing-related increase in right frontal and left parietal oscillatory theta power". The latter is a particular indication of correlation, since the parietal lobe is responsible for integrating sensory information and also processing language. Theta oscillations, a type of EEG feedback, are associated with memory encoding when people are awake. It suggests the same thing happens when we're sleeping, or at least helps strengthen the original memory.
"Our method is easy to use in daily life and can be adopted by anyone," said Rasch.
For decades people have attempted to squeeze in knowledge while they sleep, hoping that through subliminal communication they can up their IQ or change their behaviour just by pressing play and having a nap. But there is more and more evidence to suggest this could be the case one-day.
A study by Northwestern University in Illinois published in 2009 showed that when a group of volunteers were taught to associate memories with sounds, when those sounds were later played back to them during the night the memories were consolidated. Then in 2012, neurobiologists from the Weizmann Institute of Science in Israel found that they could actually teach people to associate smells with sounds by conditioning them while they slept. It suggests we can actually learn entirely new things while we're sleeping, not just consolidate old memories.
(End of article) |
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Sashadroogie

Joined: 17 Apr 2007 Posts: 11061 Location: Moskva, The Workers' Paradise
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Posted: Wed Jul 02, 2014 7:12 am Post subject: |
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Dear God, not another 'get fluent quick' scheme!? |
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scot47

Joined: 10 Jan 2003 Posts: 15343
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Posted: Wed Jul 02, 2014 12:34 pm Post subject: |
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No effort required ! |
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johnslat

Joined: 21 Jan 2003 Posts: 13859 Location: Santa Fe, New Mexico, USA
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Posted: Wed Jul 02, 2014 1:20 pm Post subject: |
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If learning while asleep really worked, Saudi students would all be fluent in English.
Regards,
John |
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Mushkilla

Joined: 17 Apr 2014 Posts: 320 Location: United Kingdom
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Posted: Wed Jul 02, 2014 5:24 pm Post subject: |
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By analogy to "I think, therefore I exist", can we say "I sleep, therefore I learn"?  |
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Lack
Joined: 10 Aug 2011 Posts: 252
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Posted: Thu Sep 04, 2014 8:30 pm Post subject: |
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I have sometimes wondered if languages can be learned or improved during lucid dreaming? I'm guessing not, but how revolutionary that would be. |
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roadwalker

Joined: 24 Aug 2005 Posts: 1750 Location: Ch
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Posted: Fri Sep 05, 2014 10:33 pm Post subject: |
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I don't know if it helps learn a language or not. I had a high school French teacher who insisted that the best time to study a foreign language was just before bedtime. It didn't seem to help me in high school, but perhaps it did. I thought of that later when I had some Pimsleur tapes or similar. That's when I made my discovery: in bed at night trying to follow the tape and respond in the foreign language, I never made it more than five minutes before falling asleep.
It's an insomnia remedy, not a language boost! |
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