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we've probably all done this at some
point in our lives it's the night before
a big exam and you haven't started
studying yet you'll just have to cram as
much information as possible into your
brain and one night and hope you
remember it tomorrow wouldn't it be nice
if you could just go to sleep have a
recording of everything you need to know
playing in the background and wake up
ready for the test unfortunately for
those of us who are chronic
procrastinators that doesn't work you
can't learn new information while you
sleep but it turns out that you can
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boost your recall of what you studied
while you were awake the idea that you
can learn totally new information while
you sleep has been debunked for a long
time way back in 1955 researchers showed
pretty conclusively that it doesn't work
earlier studies had suggested that
people could learn new things just by
hearing them in their sleep but there
were problems with the methods used in
those studies so the team wanted to look
into it more closely using an EEG which
measures brain activity to monitor how
deeply asleep the subjects were they
found that people were only able to
remember the information played to them
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if they heard it when they were in the
lighter stages of sleep the really
really light stages so light in fact
that the participants were actually
mostly awake 62 years later that study's
conclusions still stand
there's no good evidence that you can
learn totally new information in your
sleep but scientists have found that
there might be a way to boost part of
the learning process that happens during
sleep sleep plays a vital role in how
you create and store memories while
you're awake you learn all sorts of new
stuff taking in facts and experiences
just from going about your everyday life
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that's when your brain encodes memories
making new connections between neurons
so you can remember it all later then
when you go to sleep your brain goes
through the consolidation phase of
memory formation scientists aren't
totally sure how that works but they
think your brain turns all that stuff
you just learned into solid long-term
memories by reactivating them and
strengthening those new connections and
recent research has found that there are
ways to kind of hack that process in a
2007 study for example a group of
neuroscientists had people learned the
locations of a bunch of different
objects while it smelled like roses then
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made it smelled like roses again while
they were asleep when they woke up the
subjects were better at remembering
where the objects were compared to when
they did the same task without any
smells the researchers
that when the subject smelled roses
while they slept that boosted the memory
consolidation process because their
brains associated the smell with the
memories of the object location
basically the smell acted as a cue to
their brains to reactivate those
memories strengthening the connections
between the neurons that stored them and
stronger connections meant they had an
easier time recalling the memories when
they woke up that 2007 study was small
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but later studies that tested the idea
found similar results and other
researches found that this works with
more than just odor cues you can do it
with sound too for example and a study
published in the Journal of Neuroscience
in 2013 sixty people were asked to place
72 images in different locations on a
computer screen each time they placed an
item a corresponding sound was played so
for example if they were placing down a
picture of a cat they'd hear a meow they
were told that remembering each of these
items later on would earn them a certain
number of points half of the items had
super-high point values and half were
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super low but to get the most points
possible they had to remember where they
placed absolutely everything and with
seventy two items that wouldn't be easy
after they've made their placements the
subjects took a 90 minute nap just about
enough for one full cycle of sleep well
the people in the experimental group
were sleeping they were played eighteen
of the sounds associated with low value
items the people in the control group
just slept with white noise playing
instead once they were wide-awake and
trying to remember the locations of as
many items as they could for those sweet
sweet science points the subjects mostly
remembered the ones with high point
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values but the people in the
experimental group also tended to
remember the low value items the ones
they've been reminded of while they
slept the researchers concluded that
just like in the studies on Oh Dirk use
the sounds cued the subjects brains to
reactivate the memories associated with
them that strengthened those memories so
they were better at recalling them later
and again like with odor cues other
studies have also found that sound cues
can boost your recall for example in a
2014 study that involves 68 subjects a
group of researchers found that playing
sound cues while people were asleep help
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them learn a new language they had
people learn 120 new words and their
translations then played some of those
new words back to them while they slept
the team found that people were able to
remember about 10 percent more of the
cued words than the words they hadn't
heard while they were asleep but in a
follow-up study published the next year
the same group of researchers found that
if they played the new word
and their translations the memory boost
went away so it wasn't hearing the
information while they slept that helped
they remember it it was the sound they
associated with the memory when they
heard the word and its translation it
became more than a simple sound cue and
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the second word interfered with the
memory consolidation process so the next
time you're cramming for a test you
might want to try connecting the new
information with certain sounds or
smells then letting yourself hear or
smell those things again when you go to
sleep you still might not do as well as
you would have if you've just studied
properly but hacking your memory could
help you get a few more questions right
good luck thanks for watching this
episode of scishow psyche if you want to
learn more cool stuff like this about
our weird human brains you can go to
youtube.com/scishow psyche and subscribe
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