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Journal Article

Citation

Lo JC, Ang JWA, Koa TB, Ong JL, Lim J. Sleep Adv. 2022; 3(1): zpac040.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2022, Oxford University Press)

DOI

10.1093/sleepadvances/zpac040

PMID

37193393

PMCID

PMC10104386

Abstract

STUDY OBJECTIVES: We attempted to predict vigilance performance in adolescents during partial sleep deprivation using task summary metrics and drift diffusion modelling measures (DDM) derived from baseline vigilance performance.

METHODS: In the Need for Sleep studies, 57 adolescents (age = 15-19 years) underwent two baseline nights of 9-h time-in-bed (TIB), followed by two cycles of weekday sleep-restricted nights (5-h or 6.5-h TIB) and weekend recovery nights (9-h TIB). Vigilance was assessed daily with the Psychomotor Vigilance Task (PVT), with the number of lapses (response times ≥ 500 ms) as the primary outcome measure. The two DDM predictors were drift rate, which quantifies the speed of information accumulation and determines how quickly an individual derives a decision response, and non-decision time range, which indicates within-subject variation in physical, non-cognitive responding, e.g. motor actions.

RESULTS: In the first week of sleep curtailment, faster accumulation of lapses was significantly associated with more lapses at baseline (p =.02), but not the two baseline DDM metrics: drift and non-decision time range (p >.07). On the other hand, faster accumulation of lapses and greater increment in reaction time variability from the first to the second week of sleep restriction were associated with lower drift (p <.007) at baseline.

CONCLUSIONS: Among adolescents, baseline PVT lapses can predict inter-individual differences in vigilance vulnerability during 1 week of sleep restriction on weekdays, while drift more consistently predicts vulnerability during more weeks of sleep curtailment. CLINICAL TRIAL INFORMATION: Effects of Napping in Sleep-Restricted Adolescents, clinicaltrials.gov, NCT02838095. The Cognitive and Metabolic Effects of Sleep Restriction in Adolescents (NFS4), clinicaltrials.gov, NCT03333512.


Language: en

Keywords

vulnerability; sleep restriction; vigilance; sustained attention; baseline performance; diffusion drift model

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