2006
DOI: 10.1016/j.physbeh.2005.09.017
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EEG spectral power and cognitive performance during sleep inertia: The effect of normal sleep duration and partial sleep deprivation

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Cited by 82 publications
(56 citation statements)
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“…These results are in agreement with the results found by Tassi et al (2006) which affirm the increase in the RT and the percentage of errors in the Stroop test following a partial sleep deprivation. Our results agree with those of Roky et al (2000) which reported the impact of the partial sleep deprivation caused by Ramadan on the RT.…”
Section: Biological Rhythm Research 187supporting
confidence: 93%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…These results are in agreement with the results found by Tassi et al (2006) which affirm the increase in the RT and the percentage of errors in the Stroop test following a partial sleep deprivation. Our results agree with those of Roky et al (2000) which reported the impact of the partial sleep deprivation caused by Ramadan on the RT.…”
Section: Biological Rhythm Research 187supporting
confidence: 93%
“…drugs), and lifestyle (Weinger & Ancoli-Israel 2002;. The partial sleep deprivation could affect the physical (Sinnerton & Reilly 1992;Reilly & Edwards 2006;van Dongen 2006;Souissi et al 2008) and the cognitive performance (Pilcher & Huffcutt 1996;MacCarthy & Water 1997;Philip et al 2003;Yokoi et al 2003;Tassi et al 2006;Jarraya et al 2012). However, the trend is not the same in everyone or for all the components of performance.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It would be interesting to measure the effects of an artificial dawn on brain activity shortly after waking up. A wide range of physiological changes accompanies the waking-up process in the morning, such as heat dissipation (Kräuchi et al, 2004), awakening cortisol response (Edwards et al, 2001), and changes in EEG spectrum (Tassi et al, 2006). The immediate effects of artificial dawn on these aspects were tested in the study of Van de Werken and co-authors (2010) under laboratory-controlled conditions.…”
Section: Effects Of Artificial Dawn On Sleep Inertia 1233mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Lapses in alertness become more frequent and prolonged under conditions of sustained wakefulness or lack of sleep, and may have both subtle and catastrophic consequences for operation safety and effectiveness in a wide variety of operational environments. Several studies have demonstrated that fluctuations in human performance and alertness are accompanied by distinct power spectrum changes of the electroencephalogram (EEG) reordered noninvasively from the scalp (Makeig and Inlow, 1993;Jung, 1995, 1996;Jung et al, 1997;Makeig et al, 2000;Schier, 2000;Craig, 2002, 2005;Peiris et al, 2006;Tassi et al, 2006;Davidson et al, 2007;Huang et al, 2001Huang et al, , 2007aHuang et al, ,b, 2008Huang et al, , 2009). further demonstrated the feasibility of accurately estimating shifts in a subject's alertness level, as indexed by changes in their performance level on a simple auditory target detection task, by monitoring the changes in EEG power spectra or other measures.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%