Better later: evening practice is advantageous for motor skill consolidation in the elderly.
Maria KormanCarmit GalElla GabitovAvi KarniPublished in: Learning & memory (Cold Spring Harbor, N.Y.) (2021)
How does the time of day of a practice session affect learning of a new motor sequence in the elderly? Participants practiced a given finger tapping sequence either during morning or evening hours. All participants robustly improved performance speed within the session concurrent with a reorganization of the tapping pattern of the sequence. However, evening-trained participants showed additional gains overnight and at 1 wk posttraining; moreover, evening training led to a further reorganization of the tapping pattern offline. A learning experience preceding nocturnal sleep can lead to a task-specific movement routine as an expression of novel "how to" knowledge in the elderly.