The effect of split sleep schedules (6h-on/6h-off) on neurobehavioural performance, sleep and sleepiness

Feb 7, 2016Applied ergonomics

How splitting sleep into 6-hour blocks affects thinking, sleep quality, and tiredness

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Abstract

Sixteen healthy adults participated in a 9-day study examining the effects of 6h-on/6h-off split sleep schedules on sleep and performance.

  • Participants experienced reduced total sleep during split sleep schedules compared to baseline.
  • Subjective sleepiness was higher on shift days than at baseline, but did not accumulate across days.
  • Performance, measured by reaction times, was slower on the first shift day in the 6h-late condition relative to baseline.
  • Circadian variations affected performance, with more lapses and slower reaction times observed at the end of night shifts in the 6h-late condition.
  • The schedule did not lead to cumulative performance impairment over the days, but deficits were noted during the biological night.

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