Cumulative sleepiness, mood disturbance, and psychomotor vigilance performance decrements during a week of sleep restricted to 4-5 hours per night.

Apr 1, 1997Sleep

Increasing sleepiness, mood problems, and slower reaction times during a week of 4–5 hours of sleep per night

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Abstract

Sleep restriction to an average of 4.98 hours per night over seven days led to significant cumulative effects on waking neurobehavioral alertness.

  • Cumulative sleep debt resulted in increased subjective sleepiness and mood disturbances, with significant changes observed across multiple scales.
  • Performance on psychomotor vigilance tasks showed a notable increase in the frequency and duration of lapses due to sleep restriction.
  • Subjective changes in alertness typically appeared one day before noticeable performance deficits.
  • The most substantial changes in both subjective and performance measures occurred during the first and last two days of sleep restriction.
  • Recovery from performance deficits required at least two full nights of sleep after the period of restriction.

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