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The relationship between sleep and working memory in children with neurological conditions

The relationship between sleep and working memory in children with neurological conditions
The relationship between sleep and working memory in children with neurological conditions
The objective of this study is to investigate whether sleep problems might account for the increased working memory deficits observed in school-aged children with neurological conditions. A novel, transdiagnostic approach to the investigation was chosen, and sleep is treated as a process that can potentially account for working memory difficulties across a range of neurological conditions. Prevalence estimates of sleep problems are also examined. Archival data of 237 children aged 6 to 11 years were collected from a Western Australian statewide neuropsychological service for the period 26 July 2011 to 14 January 2014. Measures of parent-reported sleep quality, snoring, and daytime sleepiness were obtained, in addition to objective measures of verbal and spatial working memory, storage capacity, and processing speed. The results of the data analysis reveal that over one third of participants reported having clinically-significant levels of sleep problems and that poor sleep quality is significantly associated with verbal working memory difficulties. This association remains after partialling out the variance contributed to performance by storage capacity and processing speed, suggesting that sleep is impacting upon an executive component of working memory. No other significant associations are observed. The results suggest that poor sleep quality is associated with an executive component of verbal (rather than spatial) working memory in children with neurological conditions. This has implications for the biological mechanisms thought to underlie the relationship between sleep and cognition in children. The results also demonstrate the clinical utility of a transdiagnostic approach when investigating sleep and cognition in children with neurological conditions.
0929-7049
304-321
McCann, Marie
46823291-04ef-4b30-9bd4-5fd852f6407e
Bayliss, Donna M.
2d06c596-972c-4564-93f8-184b2c2ff43b
Pestell, Carmela
bcd6550b-3788-4091-a1df-5806a12b9a58
Hill, Catherine M.
867cd0a0-dabc-4152-b4bf-8e9fbc0edf8d
Bucks, Romola S.
95c31da3-2a01-45e7-a648-76d84a49edc4
McCann, Marie
46823291-04ef-4b30-9bd4-5fd852f6407e
Bayliss, Donna M.
2d06c596-972c-4564-93f8-184b2c2ff43b
Pestell, Carmela
bcd6550b-3788-4091-a1df-5806a12b9a58
Hill, Catherine M.
867cd0a0-dabc-4152-b4bf-8e9fbc0edf8d
Bucks, Romola S.
95c31da3-2a01-45e7-a648-76d84a49edc4

McCann, Marie, Bayliss, Donna M., Pestell, Carmela, Hill, Catherine M. and Bucks, Romola S. (2018) The relationship between sleep and working memory in children with neurological conditions. Child Neuropsychology, 24 (3), 304-321. (doi:10.1080/09297049.2016.1231298).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The objective of this study is to investigate whether sleep problems might account for the increased working memory deficits observed in school-aged children with neurological conditions. A novel, transdiagnostic approach to the investigation was chosen, and sleep is treated as a process that can potentially account for working memory difficulties across a range of neurological conditions. Prevalence estimates of sleep problems are also examined. Archival data of 237 children aged 6 to 11 years were collected from a Western Australian statewide neuropsychological service for the period 26 July 2011 to 14 January 2014. Measures of parent-reported sleep quality, snoring, and daytime sleepiness were obtained, in addition to objective measures of verbal and spatial working memory, storage capacity, and processing speed. The results of the data analysis reveal that over one third of participants reported having clinically-significant levels of sleep problems and that poor sleep quality is significantly associated with verbal working memory difficulties. This association remains after partialling out the variance contributed to performance by storage capacity and processing speed, suggesting that sleep is impacting upon an executive component of working memory. No other significant associations are observed. The results suggest that poor sleep quality is associated with an executive component of verbal (rather than spatial) working memory in children with neurological conditions. This has implications for the biological mechanisms thought to underlie the relationship between sleep and cognition in children. The results also demonstrate the clinical utility of a transdiagnostic approach when investigating sleep and cognition in children with neurological conditions.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 27 August 2016
e-pub ahead of print date: 3 October 2016
Published date: 2018
Organisations: Clinical & Experimental Sciences

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 401646
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/401646
ISSN: 0929-7049
PURE UUID: e3b05356-8895-4b9e-9773-e783bd95a0cb
ORCID for Catherine M. Hill: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-2372-5904

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 19 Oct 2016 08:54
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:01

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Contributors

Author: Marie McCann
Author: Donna M. Bayliss
Author: Carmela Pestell
Author: Romola S. Bucks

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