2005
DOI: 10.1093/sleep/28.6.707
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Impairment of Error Monitoring Following Sleep Deprivation

Abstract: One night of sleep deprivation impaired both the error detection and error remedial actions and highlighted the inability to avoid making errors again after erroneous responses were already made. The results showed that a vicious cycle occurred between performance deterioration and impairment of error-remedial mechanisms that inevitably led to making more successive errors.

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Cited by 85 publications
(81 citation statements)
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“…Thirty-nine of them fulfilled all the inclusion criteria, which were similar to those used in our previous studies (Hsieh et al, 2007;Tsai et al, 2005). In brief, the participants did not suffer from medical and sleep-related disorders, drug use, irregular sleep patterns, and excessive daytime sleepiness; besides, they showed anxiety and depression levels within the normal range and an intermediate type of preference for a particular time of the day.…”
Section: Methods Participantsmentioning
confidence: 95%
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“…Thirty-nine of them fulfilled all the inclusion criteria, which were similar to those used in our previous studies (Hsieh et al, 2007;Tsai et al, 2005). In brief, the participants did not suffer from medical and sleep-related disorders, drug use, irregular sleep patterns, and excessive daytime sleepiness; besides, they showed anxiety and depression levels within the normal range and an intermediate type of preference for a particular time of the day.…”
Section: Methods Participantsmentioning
confidence: 95%
“…This study was performed according to a previously described procedure (Hsieh et al, 2007;Tsai et al, 2005). Briefly, the participants received an arrow version of the Flanker task (Eriksen and Eriksen, 1974), while simultaneously being subjected to multiple-channel EEG recordings in the morning after NS and after one night of TSD, with at least a 1-week interval between the two sleep conditions in a counterbalanced sequence.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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