Getting good sleep improves your brain in these ways:
1) Sleep improves long-term factual recall
Your brain stories different memories in different places. The hippocampus stores short-term memory with a limited capacity; the cortex stores long-term memory in a large storage bank.
The slow-wave, pulsating NREM sleep moves facts from the hippocampus to the cortex. This has two positive effects: 1) it secure memories for the long term, and 2) it clears out short-term memory to make room for new information and improves future learning.
Have you ever woken up recalling facts that you couldn’t have recalled before sleeping? Sleep may make corrupted memories accessible again.
While good sleep improves memory, sleep deprivation can prevent new memories from being formed. In part, this might be because the hippocampus becomes less functional with less sleep, partially because lack of NREM sleep prevents solidifying of new memories.
Unfortunately, making up a sleep deficit later doesn’t help recover a previous days’ memory - if you lost it, you’ve lost it.
2) Sleep prunes memories worth forgetting
Sleep doesn’t preserve all memories equally strongly - somehow, the brain knows which memories are useful and worth preserving, and which ones are useless and OK discarding.
Experimentally, this has been shown in experiments where subjects are given a list of words and instructed which words to remember and which to forget. Students who get to take a nap show stronger memories for the appropriate words, compared to students who don’t nap.
3) Sleep increases “muscle memory” or motor task proficiency
You might struggle with a motor task (like playing a tough sequence on piano), but after sleeping, be able to play it flawlessly. Sleep seems to transfer motor memories to subconscious habits.
Sleep deprivation also worsens general athletic performance: getting less sleep decreases your aerobic capacity, time to exhaustion, and recovery; and it increases the risk of injury and lactic acid generation.
The above benefits generally occur in NREM sleep, which is concentrated in the beginning of sleep. In experiments, participants who have NREM sleep disrupted perform worse than those who have REM sleep disrupted.
A few last scientific details:
Now that we understand the impact of sleep on the brain, imagine how we can apply this knowledge into useful therapies: