New study: Daytime naps are good for the brain Facebook Twitter Email SMS WhatsApp Share By J. Correspondent | October 4, 2013 Any parent knows that a daytime nap can help keep preschoolers from getting cranky. Now a small study suggests that it helps them learn, too. The lesson for grown-ups: Don’t cut out the naps just to cram more learning activities into a preschooler’s day, say researchers from the University of Massachusetts Amherst. They studied 40 children, ages 3 to 5. In the morning, the children were shown a grid with pictures of nine or 12 items like a cat or an umbrella. That afternoon and the next morning, the children were tested on how well they remembered the location of each image. All of the children were tested under two conditions, one in which they were encouraged to nap before, and another in which they were kept awake. Without a nap, they were about 65 percent accurate. With a nap, their accuracy reached about 75 percent. The research shows that “naps are important for preschool children,” Rebecca Spencer, senior author of the study, said in a statement. The study was published Sept. 23 by the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. — ap J. Correspondent Also On J. Recipe Help! I need a main course and a tasty Pesach dessert Sports Meet Zack Gelof, a Jewish ballplayer inspiring high hopes in the A’s organization Israel In Israel, American teens join protests — or not The Bagel Report ‘Extrapolations’ and AI haggadahs Subscribe to our Newsletter Enter Email Sign Up