| Literature DB >> 25527035 |
Gary H Kamimori1, Tom M McLellan, Charmaine M Tate, David M Voss, Phil Niro, Harris R Lieberman.
Abstract
RATIONALE: Various occupational groups are required to maintain optimal physical and cognitive function during overnight periods of wakefulness, often with less than optimal sleep. Strategies are required to help mitigate the impairments in cognitive function to help sustain workplace safety and productivity.Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25527035 PMCID: PMC4432086 DOI: 10.1007/s00213-014-3834-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Psychopharmacology (Berl) ISSN: 0033-3158 Impact factor: 4.530
The timeline for the study design
| Day | Time (h) | Task |
|---|---|---|
| One | 0745 | Participant briefing and initial training on cognitive tasks |
| 0815 | Control live-fire and familiarization of obstacle course | |
| 2000 | Familiarization of cognitive tasks | |
| 2030 | Control FVT | |
| 2230 | Familiarization of cognitive tasks | |
| Two | 0800 | Control obstacle course |
| 0900 | Control cognitive tasks | |
| 1815 | PVT, LRT | |
| 2100 | PVT, LRT | |
| 2145 | 200 mg drug or placebo, PVT | |
| 2200 | Live-fire marksmanship followed by PVT | |
| Three | 0045 | PVT, LRT |
| 0100 | 200 mg drug or placebo, PVT | |
| 0130 | FVT session 1 | |
| 0330 | PVT, LRT | |
| 0345 | 200 mg drug or placebo, PVT | |
| 0415 | FVT session 2 | |
| 0615 | PVT, LRT | |
| 0700 | 200 mg drug or placebo, PVT | |
| 0730 | Obstacle course | |
| 1300 | PVT followed by 4-h sleep period | |
| 1815 | PVT, LRT | |
| 2100 | PVT, LRT | |
| 2145 | 200 mg drug or placebo, PVT | |
| 2200 | Live-fire marksmanship followed by PVT | |
| Four | 0045 | PVT, LRT |
| 0100 | 200 mg drug or placebo, PVT | |
| 0130 | FVT session 3 | |
| 0330 | PVT, LRT | |
| 0345 | 200 mg drug or placebo, PVT | |
| 0415 | FVT session 4 | |
| 0615 | PVT, LRT | |
| 0700 | 200 mg drug or placebo, PVT | |
| 0730 | Obstacle course | |
| 1300 | PVT followed by 4-h sleep period | |
| 1815 | PVT, LRT | |
| 2100 | PVT, LRT | |
| 2145 | 200 mg drug or placebo, PVT | |
| 2200 | Live-fire marksmanship followed by PVT | |
| Five | 0045 | PVT, LRT |
| 0100 | 200 mg drug or placebo, PVT | |
| 0130 | FVT session 5 | |
| 0330 | PVT, LRT | |
| 0345 | 200 mg drug or placebo, PVT | |
| 0415 | FVT session 6 | |
| 0615 | PVT, LRT | |
| 0700 | 200 mg drug or placebo, PVT | |
| 0730 | Obstacle course | |
| 0920 | PVT followed by 2-h sleep period | |
| 1130 | PVT, de-brief and release |
Cognitive tasks included logical reasoning (LRT), psychomotor vigilance (PVT) and the field vigilance (FVT) tests
Fig. 1Response speed during the psychomotor vigilance test beginning during the evening of day 2 through to the morning of day 5 for the caffeine and placebo groups. The asterisk indicates a significant group by time interaction over the 3 days. The arrows indicate when 200 mg of caffeine or placebo was administered
Fig. 2The number of points recorded during the control (CTRL) and six field vigilance test (FVT) sessions for the caffeine and placebo groups. The asterisk indicates a significant main effect between groups throughout the overnight testing sessions, whereas the cross indicates that both groups performed worse during the second night of testing
Fig. 3The number of correct responses to the stimuli presented on the vigilance monitor during the control (CTRL) and six field vigilance test (FVT) sessions for the caffeine and placebo groups. The asterisk indicates a significant difference between groups during the given test session
Fig. 4Mean correct response time during the logical reasoning test beginning during the evening of day 2 through to the morning of day 5 for the caffeine and placebo groups. The asterisk indicates a significant difference between groups during the given test session