BEIJING, March 12 (Xinhuanet) -- Researchers say a
familiar smell in the bedroom while sleeping may improve memory -- if it's the
right stage of sleep and memory.
In the study, being published Friday in the journal
Science, it worked only for some kinds of memories and during one stage of
sleep, which means it's not the answer for people hunting a quick memory
boost.
German scientists using medical students for the
study had them play a computer version of a common memory game: They turned over
pairs of cards to find each one's match.
Some played in a rose-scented room. Later that night,
while they were in a deep stage of sleep known as slow-wave sleep, researchers
gave them another whiff of roses.
The next day, the rose-scented sleepers remembered
the locations of those cards better than people who didn't get a whiff,
answering correctly 97 percent of the time compared with 86 percent.
People exposed to the odor during the lighter dream
stage of sleep known as REM sleep saw no memory boost.
Nor did scent aid memory when the students tried a
different trick, learning a finger-tapping sequence, neurobiologists from the
University of Lubeck reported in Friday's edition of the journal Science.
What happened? Anyone who's ever gotten a whiff of a
particular odor and flashed back to an emotional memory -- grandma's apple pie,
say -- knows scent and memory can be intertwined.
With the card game, the odor reactivated the day's
new memories of object placement, allowing a now-resting brain to consolidate
them, the researchers wrote. But because different parts of the brain are
involved with different types of memory, the odor didn't play a role with the
more numerical finger-tapping test.
(Agencies)