Here's a good reason to make sure your child gets adequate sleep each night. 
A new study in the journal Brain Sciences shows that connections are strengthened
 between the right and left hemispheres of the brain during sleep, as 
much as 20 percent in just one night. Connections are strengthened by 
the formation of myelin around brain nerve fibers; myelin serves almost 
as a form of "insulation," and is an important part of the movement of 
electrical impulses between cells. 
"Interestingly, during a night of sleep, connections weakened within hemispheres but strengthened between hemispheres," study researcher Salome Kurth, a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Colorado Boulder, said in a statement. 
These strengthening connections are a sign of a maturing brain, which
 is important to building language and impulse control skills. However, 
more research is needed to see how exactly sleep strengthens these 
connections, researchers noted. 
Kurth and assistant professor Monique LeBourgeois conducted 
electroencephalograms on eight children at ages 2, 3 and 5, to examine 
changes in brain activity with increasing age. They found that as the 
participants got older, the connections got stronger between the left 
and right hemispheres. 
Indeed, a past study in mice published in the Journal of Neuroscience also showed that sleep influences myelin production; getting sleep seems to turn on genes linked with myelin formation, while lack of sleep seems to turn on genes linked with cell death. 
 
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