Neuroscience

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Missing sleep may hurt your memory
Lack of sleep, already considered a public health epidemic, can also lead to errors in memory, finds a new study by researchers at Michigan State University and the University of California, Irvine.
The study, published online in the journal Psychological Science, found participants deprived of a night’s sleep were more likely to flub the details of a simulated burglary they were shown in a series of images.
Distorted memory can have serious consequences in areas such as criminal justice, where eyewitness misidentifications are thought to be the leading cause of wrongful convictions in the United States.
“We found memory distortion is greater after sleep deprivation,” said Kimberly Fenn, MSU associate professor of psychology and co-investigator on the study. “And people are getting less sleep each night than they ever have.”
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention calls insufficient sleep an epidemic and said it’s linked to vehicle crashes, industrial disasters and chronic diseases such as hypertension and diabetes.
The researchers conducted experiments at MSU and UC-Irvine to gauge the effect of insufficient sleep on memory. The results: Participants who were kept awake for 24 hours – and even those who got five or fewer hours of sleep – were more likely to mix up event details than participants who were well rested.
“People who repeatedly get low amounts of sleep every night could be more prone in the long run to develop these forms of memory distortion,” Fenn said. “It’s not just a full night of sleep deprivation that puts them at risk.”

Missing sleep may hurt your memory

Lack of sleep, already considered a public health epidemic, can also lead to errors in memory, finds a new study by researchers at Michigan State University and the University of California, Irvine.

The study, published online in the journal Psychological Science, found participants deprived of a night’s sleep were more likely to flub the details of a simulated burglary they were shown in a series of images.

Distorted memory can have serious consequences in areas such as criminal justice, where eyewitness misidentifications are thought to be the leading cause of wrongful convictions in the United States.

“We found memory distortion is greater after sleep deprivation,” said Kimberly Fenn, MSU associate professor of psychology and co-investigator on the study. “And people are getting less sleep each night than they ever have.”

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention calls insufficient sleep an epidemic and said it’s linked to vehicle crashes, industrial disasters and chronic diseases such as hypertension and diabetes.

The researchers conducted experiments at MSU and UC-Irvine to gauge the effect of insufficient sleep on memory. The results: Participants who were kept awake for 24 hours – and even those who got five or fewer hours of sleep – were more likely to mix up event details than participants who were well rested.

“People who repeatedly get low amounts of sleep every night could be more prone in the long run to develop these forms of memory distortion,” Fenn said. “It’s not just a full night of sleep deprivation that puts them at risk.”

Filed under sleep sleep deprivation memory false memory psychology neuroscience science

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  12. kiotsuketeplease reblogged this from linguisten and added:
    I think one reason this lack of sleep has become epidemic, so to speak, is that our culture (I’m from the US, though I...
  13. derifairy reblogged this from linguisten
  14. linguisten reblogged this from neurosciencestuff
  15. meanheepark reblogged this from vanesa
  16. brett-caton reblogged this from vanesa and added:
    Because of chronic pain, I had terrible sleep for months, and my memory of it is quite vague as a result. I do remember...
  17. vanesa reblogged this from neurosciencestuff
  18. cherylilov reblogged this from neurosciencestuff
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  21. draikun reblogged this from neurosciencestuff
  22. negamegantron reblogged this from sephirajo
  23. seraangel reblogged this from sephirajo and added:
    Considering I’m only now starting to get my short term memory under control after starting to sleep better, I’m not all...
  24. sephirajo reblogged this from truth-has-a-liberal-bias and added:
    Huh, maybe this can help explain fibro fog.
  25. --dopamine reblogged this from dxmedstudent and added:
    Medlife I guess is huge oxymoron ..
  26. tasiorsi reblogged this from onlyhestandsthere and added:
    Szóval mostanában nem semmit teszek, hanem mentem a menthetőt. Ok.
  27. vivelamours reblogged this from padarnaalat-deactivated972100372
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