Publication | Closed Access
The effects of 28 hours of sleep deprivation on respiratory sinus arrhythmia during tasks with low and high controlled attention demands
25
Citations
31
References
2008
Year
NeuropsychologyRespiratory Sinus ArrhythmiaAttentionSocial SciencesSleep-related Breathing DisorderAttention DemandsCircadian RhythmSleep DeprivedSleepAlertnessTask PerformanceInsomniaSleep DeprivationSleep DisorderNeurophysiologyPhysiologyNeuroscienceSleep ApneaMedicine
Task performance while sleep deprived may be moderated by the controlled attention required by the task (Pilcher, Band, Odle-Dusseau, & Muth, 2007). This study examined the effects of 28 h of sleep deprivation on respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA) during tasks with low and high controlled attention demands. The results showed that RSA increased throughout the night for both task types, but was consistently reduced during the low compared to high controlled attention tasks. The increase in RSA was linear for the high controlled attention tasks but curvilinear for the low ones. Hence, RSA followed a circadian pattern during the low controlled attention tasks but not the high ones. These results suggest that the effects of sleep deprivation on task performance may be moderated by parasympathetic activity and task type, and this has implications for task assignment during sustained operations that cause sleep deprivation.
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