hero image
Rebecca Spencer - University of Massachusetts Amherst. Amherst, MA, US

Rebecca Spencer

Professor of Psychological and Brain Sciences | University of Massachusetts Amherst

Amherst, MA, UNITED STATES

Rebecca Spencer is one of the nation's leading researchers exploring the relationship between sleep and brain function.

Expertise (7)

Children and Napping

Napping

Sleep and Learning

Learning and Memory

Children and Sleep

Cognition

Sleep Memory and Learning

Biography

A leading expert on the of the relationship between sleep, memory and learning and how these change across the life span, Rebecca Spencer has appeared in media ranging from the New York Time to PBS, the BBC, Netflix and Glamour magazine.

She leads the Somneurolab at UMass Amherst, where her research team uses a variety of techniques to
explore how the brain operates during sleep and how this processing affects daytime cognition.

Social Media

Video

Publications:

Documents:

Photos:

Videos:

Dr. Rebecca Spencer - Sleep on it! Dr. Rebecca Spencer Why do we sleep? Dr. Rebecca Spencer on What Happens to Your Brain When it's Low on Sleep

Audio/Podcasts:

Education (2)

Purdue University: Ph.D., Neuroscience

Hope College: B.A., Biology/Kinesiology

Select Media Coverage (13)

Can a nap make up for a bad night of sleep?

The Straits Times  online

2024-01-18

Rebecca Spencer, professor psychological and brain sciences, says that while a midday nap will probably replenish your energy enough to get you through your day, it will not necessarily negate the health risks that may come with insufficient sleep at night.

napping

view more

Women are more likely to be sleep deprived. Here’s why that’s so bad.

National Geographic  online

2023-09-27

Rebecca Spencer comments on research about the impact of sleep deprivation on learning. “Sleep plays a very active role in memory consolidation,” she says. She describes the hippocampus as a desk where papers get piled up throughout the day. “When you sleep, those ‘papers’ are filed away into a long-term filing cabinet to be retrieved as needed.” That “filing cabinet” is the cerebral cortex. “While memory consolidation can happen while awake, this process is stronger or greatest during sleep.”

view more

Can a Nap Make Up for a Bad Night of Sleep?

The New York Times  online

2023-03-28

It’s important to understand that while a midday nap will probably replenish your energy enough to get you through your day, said Rebecca Spencer, a sleep science researcher at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, it won’t necessarily negate the health risks that may come with insufficient sleep at night. Here's why.

nap

view more

Later school start times eyed to address youth mental health crisis

ABC News  tv

2022-04-03

Rebecca Spencer comments about the possibility of pushing school start times back later in the morning in an effort to improve youth mental health.

view more

How learning happens in the brains of sleeping babies

The Washington Post  print

2022-02-05

Rebecca Spencer says children shouldn’t abandon the practice of napping as they get older. “Naps are awesome — they’re doing all of this important stuff for kids at a really critical time. Why stop napping when it’s so important?”

sleeping baby

view more

Yes, Naps Are Good for You — If You Do It Right

Discover magazine  print

2020-11-12

“We've now found that sleep serves a lot of great functions. It's not surprising. That's why we spend so much time doing it,” says Rebecca Spencer, a sleep researcher at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. “The long story short is there’s a lot of evidence that naps confer all of those same benefits.”

view more

How to Fall Asleep Faster, According to Powerful Women

Glamour  print

2020-03-11

Use your own natural melatonin. How do you do that? By avoiding light in the last half hour to hour before bedtime. Of course, complete darkness may be hard to achieve, but dim the light on your phone or computer and turn off any extra lights in the room in the final hour before bed. Avoid watching tense movies, reading cliffhangers, checking work emails, or engaging in emotional “chats” before bed too. You’ll fall asleep faster. —Rebecca Spencer, neuroscience professor

view more

Naps don’t work for everyone. Genetic differences are why

The Washington Post  print

2020-03-07

“If you are a regular napper, you can get these two forces [HSP and your circadian rhythm] into a good rhythm so they are nicely balanced,” says Rebecca Spencer, professor of psychological and brain sciences at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. “The problem is few people nap so regularly.”

view more

NOVA: Mysteries of Sleep

PBS  tv

2020-02-26

Rebecca Spencer talks about what exactly is happening in our brains when we sleep.

view more

Sleep Provides 'Remarkable Effects' On Protecting Our Memories, Says Rebecca Spencer

Boston Public Radio  radio

2020-02-26

Rebecca Spencer, professor of psychological and brain sciences at UMass Amherst, joined Boston Public Radio on Wednesday to discuss her role in NOVA's newest special Mysteries of Sleep.

view more

Netflix Series: Babies

Netflix  online

2020-02-21

Rebecca Sepncer is featured in an episode on Sleep in the Netflix series, "Babies," hiighliting her work studying the connection between sleep, learning and memory in young children.

Netflix: Babies

view more

TV Not a Good Sleep Aid for Young Kids

U.S. News & World Report  online

2019-05-20

Researchers looked at 470 children aged 3 to 5 in Massachusetts and found that those who watched less than one hour of TV per day got 22 more minutes of sleep at night -- nearly 2.5 more hours per week -- than those who watched more TV on a daily basis. "Parents assumed that TV was helping their kids wind down. But it didn't work. Those kids weren't getting good sleep, and it wasn't helping them fall asleep better," said study author Rebecca Spencer, a neuroscientist at the University of Massachusetts Amherst.

view more

When the going gets tough, have a nap

BBC  online

2018-10-09

hen her daughter was preschool-aged, Rebecca Spencer experienced something familiar to many parents and childminders: the power of a nap. Without it, her daughter would be giddy, grumpy, or both. Spencer, a neuroscientist focusing on sleep at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, wanted to investigate the science behind this anecdotal experience. “The observation of a lot of people is that a napless kid is emotionally dysregulated,” she says. “So that spurred us to ask this question of, ‘Do naps actually do something to process emotions?’”

view more

Select Publications (2)

Contributions of memory and brain development to the bioregulation of naps and nap transitions in early childhood

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Rebecca M.C. Spencer and Tracy Riggins

2022-10-24

The transition from multiple sleep bouts each day to a single overnight sleep bout (i.e., nap transition) is a universal process in human development. Naps are important during infancy and early childhood as they enhance learning through memory consolidation. However, a normal part of development is the transition out of naps. Understanding nap transitions is essential in order to maximize early learning and promote positive long-term cognitive outcomes. ...

view more

Pandemic Sleep Advice Straight From Sleep Researchers

Medium

Kelly Baron, PhD, MPH, Brendan Duffy RPSGT CCSH, Michael Grandner, PhD, MTR, Jared Saletin, PhD, Rebecca Spencer, PhD, and John Hogenesch, PhD

2020-03-25

In the age of coronavirus, sleep is more important — and more elusive — than ever. Sleep researchers are here to help.

view more