Abstract

Extraction of environmental patterns underlies human learning throughout the lifespan and plays a crucial role not only in cognitive but also perceptual, motor, and social skills. At least two types of regularities contribute to acquiring skills: (1) statistical, probability-based regularities, and (2) serial order-based regularities. Memory performance of probability-based and/or serial order-based regularities over short periods (from minutes to weeks) has been widely investigated across the lifespan. However, long-term (months or year-long) memory performance of such knowledge has received relatively less attention and has not been assessed in children yet. Here, we aimed to test the long-term memory performance of probability-based and serial order-based regularities over a 1-year offline period in neurotypical children between the age of 9 and 15. Participants performed a visuomotor four-choice reaction time task designed to measure the acquisition of probability-based and serial order-based regularities simultaneously. Short-term consolidation effects were controlled by retesting their performance after a 5-h delay. They were then retested on the same task 1 year later without any practice between the sessions. Participants successfully acquired both probability-based and serial order-based regularities and retained both types of knowledge over the 1-year period. The successful retention was independent of age. Our study demonstrates that the representation of probability-based and serial order-based regularities remains stable over a long period of time. These findings offer indirect evidence for the developmental invariance model of skill consolidation.

Highlights

  • Extraction of environmental patterns underlies human learning throughout the lifespan and plays a crucial role in cognitive and perceptual, motor, and social skills

  • We have shown retained knowledge of both information after the 1-year offline period; participants successfully learnt and stabilized the regularities, and the acquired knowledge was resistant to forgetting over a long period of time

  • Both statistical and serial-order knowledge has been successfully retained after the 1-year offline period, which is in accordance with previous adult ­studies[26,27]

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Summary

Introduction

Extraction of environmental patterns underlies human learning throughout the lifespan and plays a crucial role in cognitive and perceptual, motor, and social skills. We aimed to test the long-term memory performance of probability-based and serial order-based regularities over a 1-year offline period in neurotypical children between the age of 9 and 15. They were retested on the same task 1 year later without any practice between the sessions Participants successfully acquired both probability-based and serial order-based regularities and retained both types of knowledge over the 1-year period. Our study demonstrates that the representation of probability-based and serial order-based regularities remains stable over a long period of time These findings offer indirect evidence for the developmental invariance model of skill consolidation. The present study follows this wellestablished behavioral test protocol to assess long-term memory performance and implements a 1-year offline period between the sessions

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