• Title of article

    The differential consolidation of perceptual and motor learning in skill acquisition

  • Author/Authors

    Hallgat?، نويسنده , , Emese and Gy?ri-Dani، نويسنده , , D?ra and Pek?r، نويسنده , , Judit and Janacsek، نويسنده , , Karolina and Nemeth، نويسنده , , Dezso، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2013
  • Pages
    9
  • From page
    1073
  • To page
    1081
  • Abstract
    Implicit skill learning is an unconscious way of learning which underlies not only motor but also cognitive and social skills. This form of learning is based on both motor and perceptual information. Although many studies have investigated the perceptual and motor components of “online” skill learning, the effect of consolidation on perceptual and motor characteristics of skill learning has not been studied to our knowledge. In our research we used a sequence learning task to determine if consolidation had the same or different effect on the perceptual and the motor components of skill acquisition. We introduced a 12-h (including or not including sleep) and a 24-h (diurnal control) delay between the learning and the testing phase with AM–PM, PM–AM, AM–AM and PM–PM groups, in order to examine whether the offline period had differential effects on perceptual and motor learning. Although both perceptual and motor learning were significant in the testing phase, results showed that motor knowledge transfers more effectively than perceptual knowledge during the offline period, irrespective of whether sleep occurred or not and whether there was a 12- or 24-h delay period between the learning and the testing phase. These results have important implications for the debate concerning perceptual/motor learning and the role of sleep in skill acquisition.
  • Keywords
    Sleep , Perceptual-motor learning , consolidation , Offline learning , Implicit skill learning
  • Journal title
    Cortex
  • Serial Year
    2013
  • Journal title
    Cortex
  • Record number

    2301263