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The effect of extended sleep deprivation on sleep homeostasis and cognitive performance

Eva Hennecke-2013-01-01-elib (German Aerospace Center)
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TL;DRAbstract

The effect of 58 hours of sleep deprivation on cognitive performance and physiological measures was investigated in the present study. It was hypothesized that performance deteriorates with progressive sleep loss. In addition, weak correlations were expected between subjective ratings of sleepiness and objective performance measures. During the recovery night, an increase in SWS was expected. 17 men (mean age 27 years, SD 5 years) participated in the experiment. Participants were kept awake for 2 nights and performed a test battery consisting of the PVT, N-Back Task, KSS, FAT, and waking EEG in 6-hour intervals. Moreover, sleep architecture of the recovery night was compared to a baseline night. Results indicate that there is a dose-response relationship between cognitive performance and time awake. Performance on the N-Back Task and PVT deteriorates as a function of prior wakefulness (PVT: intercept = 123.74 (± 15.3531), p < .0001; time awake= 5.488 (± 0.699), t (117) = 7.85, p &lt

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The effect of 58 hours of sleep deprivation on cognitive performance and physiological measures was investigated in the present study. It was hypothesized that performance deteriorates with progressive sleep loss. In addition, weak correlations were expected between subjective ratings of sleepiness and objective performance measures. During the recovery night, an increase in SWS was expected. 17 men (mean age 27 years, SD 5 years) participated in the experiment. Participants were kept awake for 2 nights and performed a test battery consisting of the PVT, N-Back Task, KSS, FAT, and waking EEG in 6-hour intervals. Moreover, sleep architecture of the recovery night was compared to a baseline night. Results indicate that there is a dose-response relationship between cognitive performance and time awake. Performance on the N-Back Task and PVT deteriorates as a function of prior wakefulness (PVT: intercept = 123.74 (± 15.3531), p < .0001; time awake= 5.488 (± 0.699), t (117) = 7.85, p &lt

Keywords

Sleep deprivationWakefulnessSleep (system call)Effects of sleep deprivation on cognitive performanceAudiologyPsychologySleep debtPrivation

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