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Should We All Just Take 10? A Meta-Analysis of Wakeful Rest

thesis
posted on 2024-07-09, 19:55 authored by Dani Parra
According to previous research, when people rest quietly for a brief period of time after learning, they have better memory after a delay compared to when they engage in a cognitively-demanding task. This is called the wakeful rest effect. It has been observed with different kinds of study items, interference tasks, and delay intervals involving younger, older, and amnesic participants. Despite the presumed robustness of the effect, many studies have failed to observe significant results, particularly in healthy younger adult populations. This meta-analysis aimed to evaluate the evidence for the wakeful rest effect and to identify the influence of individual differences. Multiple meta-regression was also conducted. As expected, there were larger effects for patient populations than healthy ones, as well as weaker effects for younger than older adults. The results of this meta-analysis will inform further research on the potential benefits of wakeful rest.

History

Date Created

2024-07-01

Date Modified

2024-07-08

Defense Date

2024-06-25

CIP Code

  • 42.2799

Research Director(s)

Gabriel Radvansky

Committee Members

Johnny Zhang James Brockmole

Degree

  • Master of Arts

Degree Level

  • Master's Thesis

Language

  • English

Library Record

6603298

OCLC Number

1444111339

Publisher

University of Notre Dame

Additional Groups

  • Psychology

Program Name

  • Psychology, Research and Experimental

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