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Cited by 900 publications
(636 citation statements)
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References 72 publications
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“…This was confirmed through our observation of the decrease in [oxy-Hb] of the right prefrontal region when drawing blood before and after night duty. Although an increasing number of studies have investigated the effects of sleep deprivation on cognitive and executive function performance associated with brain alterations, analyses have been limited to normal healthy participants [13,24,25]. Furthermore, these studies were less likely to involve psychological stress, such as that related to real-time night duty experience, other than that associated with laboratory conditions of sleep deprivation.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This was confirmed through our observation of the decrease in [oxy-Hb] of the right prefrontal region when drawing blood before and after night duty. Although an increasing number of studies have investigated the effects of sleep deprivation on cognitive and executive function performance associated with brain alterations, analyses have been limited to normal healthy participants [13,24,25]. Furthermore, these studies were less likely to involve psychological stress, such as that related to real-time night duty experience, other than that associated with laboratory conditions of sleep deprivation.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This finding of common sleep disturbance raises concern regarding increased risk for problems with attention, learning, memory, and higher order cognitive processes (i.e., reasoning and decision making) (Ahrberg, Dresler, Niedermaier, Steiger, & Genzel, 2012;Eschenko & Sara, 2008) that are deemed critical to the performance of USAF MQ-1 Predator/MQ-9 Reaper drone operators Chappelle, McDonald, & McMillan, 2011a). Such sleep related difficulties are also known to lead to decreased frustration tolerance, and increased symptoms of depression and anxiety (Killgore, 2010) that negatively affect daily performance. Furthermore, Picchioni et al (2010) found sleep symptoms partially mediated the relationship between combat stress and other mental health symptoms, suggesting sleep problems likely contribute to the development or maintenance of other psychological difficulties.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…13 The blunted feedback reactions observed in the reversal learning decision task used here may thus be causal to sleep deprivation-induced deficits observed on this task, as well as on the IGT and related measures in other studies of healthy subjects. 2,14,44 Further evidence for this interpretation may be found in studies that examined the processing of outcome feedback with event-related potentials (ERP). In one study using a flanker task, the amplitude of error-related negativity (ERN) was reduced after sleep deprivation, indicating reduced attention to error feedback information.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…1 In laboratory studies, sleep deprivation has consistently been shown to substantially degrade vigilance and sustained attention, whereas its effects on demanding tests of complex cognition such as decision making appear to be inconsistent and relatively small. 2,3 Paradoxically, in the natural environment there are well-documented deficits in decision making due to sleep deprivation. 4,5 In emergency response, disaster management, military encounters, and other fast-paced situations with uncertain outcomes and imperfect information, good decision making is significantly hampered by sleep deprivation.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%