Literature DB >> 19639753

Neurobehavioral performance in young adults living on a 28-h day for 6 weeks.

Jung H Lee1, Wei Wang, Edward J Silva, Anne-Marie Chang, Karine D Scheuermaier, Sean W Cain, Jeanne F Duffy.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Performance on many cognitive tasks varies with time awake and with circadian phase, and the forced desynchrony (FD) protocol can be used to separate these influences on performance. Some performance tasks show practice effects, whereas the Psychomotor Vigilance Task (PVT) has been reported not to show such effects. We aimed to compare performance on the PVT and on an addition test (ADD) across a 6-week FD study, to determine whether practice effects were present and to analyze the circadian and wake-dependent modulation of the 2 measures. DESIGN AND
SETTING: A 47-day FD study conducted at the Brigham and Women's Hospital General Clinical Research Center. PARTICIPANTS: Eleven healthy adults (mean age: 24.4 years, 2 women). MEASUREMENTS AND
RESULTS: For 2 baseline days and across 6 weeks of FD, we gave a test battery (ADD, PVT, self-rating of effort and performance) every 2 hours. During FD, there was a significant (P < 0.0001) improvement in ADD performance (more correct calculations completed), whereas PVT performance (mean reaction time, fastest 10% reaction times, lapses) significantly (P < 0.0001) declined week by week. Subjective ratings of PVT performance indicated that subjects felt their performance improved across the study (P < 0.0001), but their rating of whether they could have performed better with greater effort did not change across the study (P > 0.05).
CONCLUSIONS: The decline in PVT performance suggests a cumulative effect of sleep loss across the 6-week study. Subjects did not accurately detect their declining PVT performance, and a motivational factor could not explain this decline.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2009        PMID: 19639753      PMCID: PMC2706904          DOI: 10.1093/sleep/32.7.905

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Sleep        ISSN: 0161-8105            Impact factor:   5.849


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Review 7.  Aging and Circadian Rhythms.

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9.  Circadian and wakefulness-sleep modulation of cognition in humans.

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