2018
DOI: 10.1111/jcpp.12948
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Infant wake after sleep onset serves as a marker for different trajectories in cognitive development

Abstract: While previous research examined the relation of infant sleep and cognitive functioning measured once, this paper provides first evidence that night wake time can serve as a marker for different cognitive trajectories.

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Cited by 23 publications
(23 citation statements)
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“…They further suggested that at least some of the differences in how children and adults process newly acquired information result from agedependent differences in the forms of sleep-dependent processing applied to such memory. Pisch et al [30] investigated whether the particularly high inter-individual differences in infant sleep duration and fragmentation are indicative of cognitive developmental trajectories examined by eye-tracking over a prolonged time period. They found that children spending less time awake during the night in early life were associated with better performance of a working memory task.…”
Section: Sleep and Early Brain Developmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…They further suggested that at least some of the differences in how children and adults process newly acquired information result from agedependent differences in the forms of sleep-dependent processing applied to such memory. Pisch et al [30] investigated whether the particularly high inter-individual differences in infant sleep duration and fragmentation are indicative of cognitive developmental trajectories examined by eye-tracking over a prolonged time period. They found that children spending less time awake during the night in early life were associated with better performance of a working memory task.…”
Section: Sleep and Early Brain Developmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, what from the strictly healthcare viewpoint seems an ineludible demand, can have implications for children which cannot be ignored. It is important to maintain certain habits, especially in childhood and adolescence, because of the cognitive repercussions (Maureira Cid and Flores Ferro, 2017;Pisch et al, 2019), on acquisition of behavior patterns and social knowledge, children's health and social and economic benefits to their development and that of future generations (World Health Organization [WHO], 2020). It is easily surmised that such government measures have affected the routines of both adults (Liu N. et al, 2020;Sun et al, 2020) and children (Berasategui Sancho et al, 2020;Orgilés et al, 2020), although the significance of the change in routines and the psychological impact that this could have on parents and children is hard to define.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…At ten months of age sleep efficiency correlates positively with general cognitive development, while motor activity and night waking correlate negatively (Scher, 2005), and at eight months PSG measured snore-related arousals (where no apnea was observed) correlate negatively with cognitive development (Montgomery-Downs & Gozal, 2006). Finally, amount of time spent awake after night-time sleep onset at four and six months predicts more rapid working memory maturation over the first year of life (Pisch, Wisemann & Karmiloff-Smith, 2019), with more time awake after sleep onset predicting slower growth.…”
Section: Mean Difference Between Night-time and Day-time Sleep In Infancy Predicts Receptive Vocabulary Outcomes At Age Fivementioning
confidence: 99%