Subjective Measurements of In-Flight Sleep, Circadian Variation, and Their Relationship with Fatigue

Sep 24, 2016Aerospace medicine and human performance

Self-Reported Sleep, Body Clock Changes, and Their Link to Fatigue During Flights

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Abstract

Sleep duration increased by 10.2 minutes for every 1-hour increase in flight duration.

  • Sleep duration and quality varied based on break start times, with more sleep obtained during breaks starting between 22:00-01:59 and 02:00-05:59 compared to earlier breaks.
  • Pilots reported higher fatigue and sleepiness levels at top of descent on flights arriving between 02:00-05:59 and 06:00-09:59 domicile time.
  • With each additional hour of sleep, sleepiness ratings at top of descent decreased by 0.6 points, and fatigue ratings decreased by 0.4 points.
  • Self-reported sleep duration may serve as a reliable alternative to actigraphic measurements in monitoring pilot fatigue.

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