Regular naps may help toddlers learn language better
Toddlers who regularly take naps may develope better
language skills than those who do not take a nap, researchers say. The
findings showed that three-year-olds who napped within about an hour of
learning a new verb performed better than those who stayed awake for at least
five hours after learning, regardless of whether they were habitual
nappers. While an infant between birth and six months old may take up to
six naps a day, many children are down to one nap or no naps a day by
preschool. The learning benefit of napping could come from what is known
as slow-wave sleep,
the researchers said. “There’s a lot of evidence that different phases of
sleep contribute to memory consolidation, and one of the really important
phases is slow-wave sleep, which is one of the deepest forms of sleep,” said
Rebecca Gomez, Associate Professor at University of Arizona in the US.
“During this phase, what the brain is doing is
replaying memories during sleep, so those brain rhythms that occur during
slow-wave sleep and other phases of non-REM sleep are actually reactivating
those patterns — those memories — and replaying them and strengthening them,”
Gomez added, in the paper published in the journal Child
Development.Preschool-age children should be getting 10 to 12
hours of sleep in a 24-hour period, whether it’s all at night or a combination
of nighttime sleep and napping. If they do not get enough sleep it can
have long-term consequences including deficits on cognitive tests, Gomez
said. For the study, the team tested 39 typically developing 3-year-olds,
divided into two groups: habitual nappers and non-habitual nappers.
Parents may want to consider maintaining regular naptimes for
preschoolers, who are at an age at which naps have a tendency to dwindle, the
researchers suggested.
Source: www.thehealthsite.com
14.02.2017
Do what is right, not what is easy
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