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Journal Article

Citation

Eriksen CA, Akerstedt T, Kecklund G, Akerstedt A. Percept. Mot. Skills 2005; 101(3): 943-948.

Affiliation

Institute of Psychosocial Medicine and Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2005, SAGE Publishing)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

16491700

Abstract

Subjective sleepiness at different times is often measured in studies on sleep loss, night work, or drug effects. However, the context at the time of rating may influence results. The present study examined sleepiness throughout the day at hourly intervals and during controlled activities [reading, writing, walking, social interaction (discussion), etc.] by 10-min. intervals for 3 hr. This was done on a normal working day preceded by a scheduled early rising (to invite sleepiness) for six subjects. Analysis showed a significant U-shaped pattern across the day with peaks in the early morning and late evening. A walk and social interaction were associated with low sleepiness, compared to sedentary and quiet office work. None of this was visible in the hourly ratings. There was also a pronounced afternoon increase in sleepiness, that was not observable with hourly ratings. It was concluded that there are large variations in sleepiness related to time of day and also to context and that sparse sampling of subjective sleepiness may miss much of this variation.


Language: en

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