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Journal Article

Citation

Sanjaya KH, Sutarto AP, Damayanti KA, Hadi N. Int. J. Hum. Factors Ergon. 2023; 10(4): 417-436.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2023, Inderscience Publishers)

DOI

10.1504/IJHFE.2023.135478

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

The current literature lacks comprehensive knowledge regarding the relative and combined effects of task-related factors, such as driving in monotonous environments, and the 'post-lunch dip'-n afternoon bi-circadian increase in sleepiness-particularly within a specific chronotype group. This study aims at investigating the impact of post-lunch driving and time-on-task on fatigue and performance among well-rested morning-type individuals during simulated driving. Twelve male participants with a morningness chronotype completed a series of lane change test simulated driving tasks, comprising three 20-minute blocks both before and after lunch. The results demonstrated a significant main effect of the 'post-lunch dip' on reaction time, alertness, and self-reported sleepiness. However, neither the time spent on the task nor the interaction between sleep- and task-related factors yielded significant effects on the measured variables. Furthermore, medium to high correlations among all pairs of measures suggest a good agreement for detecting fatigue and sleepiness in driving tasks.

Keywords: post-lunch; drowsiness; chronotype; driving; fatigue; sleepiness; morningness.


Language: en

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