Sleep, Memory, and Dreams A Neurocognitive Approach
Robert Stickgold Assistant Professor of Psychiatry
Harvard Medical
School
Wednesday October 20, 2004
5:00 pm 17
Logan Hall, 249 South 36th Street NOTE ROOM CHANGE (was
200 College Hall)
Listen up, students of all ages. Cutting back on
sleep to tackle those mounting piles of homework may be self-defeating.
If you want to remember what you've learned, sleep is absolutely
necessary.
What role does sleep play in learning
and
memory?
Why are certain levels of sleep better than others? How does the brain
build dreams?
Join us as distinguished Harvard psychiatrist Robert
Stickgold presents the findings of sleep researchers who are examining
the familiar assumption that sleep and dreams put order in daily
experience.
Robert Stickgold was born in Chicago, attended
college at Harvard University, and received his PhD in biochemistry
from the University of Wisconsin in Madison. He went on to work
in neurochemistry and neurophysiology before settling into his current
research on sleep and dreaming in the cognitive neurosciences.
One of the nation's leading sleep researchers, Dr. Stickgold is widely
published on sleep and cognition, dreaming, and conscious states.
He has also written
two
science
fiction
novels,
both published by Del Rey: Gloryhits and The California
Coven Project.