Time Course of Neurobehavioral Alertness During Extended Wakefulness in Morning- and Evening-Type Healthy Sleepers

Jul 30, 2011Chronobiology international

Changes in alertness over time during long wakefulness in morning and evening people

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Abstract

Evening-type individuals reported higher subjective sleepiness but maintained similar objective alertness levels compared to morning-types during a fixed sleep-wake schedule.

  • Both evening-type and morning-type participants experienced a decline in cognitive performance during the biological night.
  • Evening-types exhibited optimal alertness throughout the night, unlike morning-types.
  • Subjective sleepiness levels were significantly higher in evening-types compared to morning-types.
  • Circadian performance was correlated with the subjective feeling of sleepiness and was slightly delayed with melatonin secretion.
  • The lapse domain showed a phase delay of 2-4 hours with body temperature, while optimal alertness had a 1-hour phase delay.

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