%0 Journal Article %T Post-class naps boost declarative learning in a naturalistic school setting %A Lucia Fraga %A Mark A. McDaniel %A Mauro Copelli %A Nat¨¢lia B. Mota %A Sidarta Ribeiro %A Thiago Cabral %J Archive of "NPJ Science of Learning". %D 2018 %R 10.1038/s41539-018-0031-z %X Experimental design and content retention for Science and History curricular contents presented for 6 consecutive weeks of sleep intervention. a On Monday, 24 students attended the same class on content A, followed by sleep time for 12 students randomly chosen each week, while the other 12 students attended class on content B. On Tuesday, all students attended the same class on content C, followed by sleep time for the students who on Monday did not have it, while the other half attended class on content B, which they had missed on Monday. Classes followed by sleep time were called NAP (contents A or C); classes followed by another content from the same discipline were called Control 1 (control with specific interference; contents A or C); classes followed by a break were called Control 2 (control with non-specific interference; always content B). b In average, content retention was significantly higher for contents followed by long naps (>30£¿min) than for contents followed by waking activities with non-specific or specific interference. c A nested analysis of individual performances showed significant gains for long naps, in comparison with non-specific waking interference. Short naps did not show benefits, neither for d group averages nor e individual nested data. Bars represent the median performance for each condition, with error bars representing standard error and each individual mean performance represented by dots. Statistical significant difference between groups using Wilcoxon Ranksum test corrected for 2 comparisons is represented by %U https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6220199/