CONTRIBUTION OF CORE BODY TEMPERATURE, PRIOR WAKE TIME, AND SLEEP STAGES TO COGNITIVE THROUGHPUT PERFORMANCE DURING FORCED DESYNCHRONY

Jul 20, 2010Chronobiology international

How body temperature, time awake, and sleep stages relate to thinking speed during disrupted sleep schedules

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Abstract

On average, participants obtained 7.6 hours of total sleep time during 28-hour forced desynchrony periods.

  • Cognitive throughput performance is influenced by circadian phase, prior wake time, and the amount of REM sleep.
  • No significant effects on cognitive throughput were found for stage 1 and stage 2 sleep or slow-wave sleep.
  • Variations in core body temperature and time awake are associated with changes in cognitive performance.
  • The absence of significant effects for slow-wave sleep may be due to limited sleep duration variability in the study.
  • Findings suggest cognitive throughput may be more sensitive to variations in REM sleep compared to slow-wave sleep.

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Full Text

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