에 대한 답변 [Recent Tests- VOL] - How sleep helps us learn

에 대한 답변 및 자세한 설명 [Recent Tests- VOL] - How sleep helps us learn

Answer Table

1. C
2. D
3. B
4. H
5. G
6. E
7. benefit
8. age
9. preschool
10. interference
11. C
12. D
13. B

Explain

[Recent Tests- VOL] - How sleep helps us learn

Researchers are uncovering the link between sleep and learning and how it changes throughout our lives

A     Most research into the relationship between memory and sleep has traditionally been conducted using young adults or animals. 7By the early 2000s, scientists had found that sleep helps young adults consolidate memory by reinforcing and filing away daytime experiences.7-8 But the older adults that Rebecca Spencer was studying at the US University of Massachusetts Amherst didn't seem to experience the same benefit. 9Spencer wondered if age altered the relationship between sleep and memory, and chose happy preschool children as subjects. 10She found that the children who regularly had short sleeps during the day benefited the most from daytime rest, largely because their memories decayed the most without these naps. By staying awake, they have more interference from daytime experiences, Spencer explains.

B     3The studies on young adults carried out in the early 2000 suggested that the reduced sensory inputs during sleep allow the brain to replay daytime experiences during a period relatively free of distracting information. This may help to solidify connections and transfer daytime memories from working part of the brain known as the hippocampus into long-term storage in the brain region called the cortex. But how sleep and memory interact at different periods of our lives remained an open question.

C     1-13In children younger than 18 months, learning is thought to occur in the cortex because the hippocampus isn't yet fully developed. As a result, researchers hypothesize that infants don't replay memories during sleep, the way adults do. Instead, sleep merely seems to prevent infants from forgetting as much as they would if they were awake.13 The net effect is that sleep permits infants to retain more of the redundant details of a learning experience, says experimental psychologist Rebecca Gómez of the University of Arizona. By the time they are two years old, 'we think that children have the brain development that supports an active process of consolidation', she adds.

D     2From the age of two, adequate sleep during the hours of darkness becomes critical for learning. Toddlers who sleep less than 10 hours display lasting cognitive deficits, even if they catch up on sleep later in their development. The effects are particularly strong in children with developmental disorders, who often suffer from disturbed sleep. 11Jamie Edgin of the University of Arizona studied children with the genetic disorder Down's syndrome comparing those who were sleep-impaired with those who slept normally. She found that there were large differences in language knowledge and observed that the non-sleep-impaired knew up to 190 more words, even after controlling for behavioural differences.

E     Understanding the impact of sleep on memory could also help another at-risk group of learners - those at the other end of the age spectrum. Previous research has suggested that older adults don't replay daytime memories; recent research suggested that older adults don't retain motor skills as well as young adults do. 6-12But neuroscientist Maria Korman from the University of Haifa in Israel recently demonstrated that sleep can help elderly to retain procedural memories just as well as younger people. Korman hypotheses that by shortening the interval between learning and consolidation, the gap prevents memories from weakening before they get the chance to be solidified. Overnight sleep might even be better, if the motor skills - in this case a complex sequence of finger and thumb movements on the non-dominant hand - are taught late enough in the day.

F     Optimising the timing of sleep and training in the elderly exploits something Korman sees as a positive side of growing old. 'As we age, our neural system becomes more aware of the relevance of the task,' Korman says. Unlike young adults, who solidify all the information they acquire throughout the day, older people consolidate those experiences that were tagged by the brain as very important.

G     Tests on older adults' memories are generating new findings about the relationship between sleep and memory at other ages as well. After learning at a conference about memory test for cognitive impairment and dementia in older adults, neuroscientist Jeanne Duffy of Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston wondered if sleep could help consolidate the connection between names and faces. 5She and her colleagues found that young adults who slept overnight after learning a list of 20 names and faces showed a 12 percent increase in retention when tested 12 hours later, compared with subjects who didn't sleep between training and testing. The findings have an 'immediate real-world application', Duffy says, as they address a common memory concern among people of all ages.

H     Developing a fuller picture of what happens to memories during sleep – and how best to modify sleep habits to aid the recall process – could benefit some of society's most sleep-deprived members of every age. 4'We need to understand this role of sleep in memory because there is such potential for intervention,' Spencer says. 'Now that we have a well-founded concept of what sleep can do for memory, it's time to put it to the test.'

Questions 1-6

Reading Passage 2 has eight paragraphs, A-H. Which paragraph contains the following information?

Write the correct letter, A-H, in boxes 1-6 on your answer sheet.

 

1

1
a difference between babies and adults with regard to a function of sleep

Correct answer: C

2

2
a reference to a developmental stage at which it is essential to have sufficient night-time sleep

Correct answer: D

3

3
the idea that the comparatively low levels of stimuli during sleep help us consolidate memories

Correct answer: B

4

4
the mention of the need to find out whether current theories are correct

Correct answer: H

5

5
research data which can be of direct help to people who are worried about memory loss

Correct answer: G

6

6
a reference to a strategy which could enable older people to remember certain things as well as younger people do

Correct answer: E

Questions 7-10

Complete the summary below. Choose ONE WORD ONLY from the passage for each answer. Write your answers in boxes 7-10 on your answer sheet.

Sleep and memory

In the past, most studies looking into how sleep helps us consolidate memories have used either animals or young adults as their subjects. But Rebecca Spencer noticed that her own research subjects did not appear to get as much 7 (benefit) from sleep as the subjects in other studies did. She wanted to know if a person's 21 8 (age) made any difference to the process of memory consolidation, so she conducted an experiment on children at the 9 (preschool) stage. She found that children who did not have a daytime sleep suffered a higher level of 10 (interference) from the day's events, and were less able to remember things later.

Questions 11-13

Look at the following research areas (Questions 11-13) and the list of researchers below.

Match each Statement with the correct researcher, A-E.

Write the correct letter, A-E, in boxes 11-13 on your answer sheet.

List of Researcher

A.  Rebecca Spencer

B.  Rebecca Gomez

C.  Jamie Edgin

D.  Maria Korman

E.  Jeanne Duffy

11

11
the connection between lack of sleep and vocabulary acquisition

Correct answer: C

12

12
the impact of sleep on how well people learn to perform physical actions

Correct answer: D

13

13
how the structure of very young brains may influence memory processes

Correct answer: B

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