2023
DOI: 10.1111/jsr.13987
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The effect of sleep restriction, with or without high‐intensity interval exercise, on behavioural alertness and mood state in young healthy males

Abstract: SummaryMood state and alertness are negatively affected by sleep loss, and can be positively influenced by exercise. However, the potential mitigating effects of exercise on sleep‐loss‐induced changes in mood state and alertness have not been studied comprehensively. Twenty‐four healthy young males were matched into one of three, 5‐night sleep interventions: normal sleep (NS; total sleep time (TST) per night = 449 ± 22 min), sleep restriction (SR; TST = 230 ± 5 min), or sleep restriction and exercise (SR + EX;… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(3 citation statements)
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References 48 publications
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“…It needs to be noted that the operationalization of assessing fatigue, alertness, and mood state may be the main cause of the mixed study results. For instance, we measured them via a questionnaire that contains one question for each variable, while others measured fatigue using other questionnaires or measured alertness objectively via psychomotor vigilance testing [44]. Additionally, the intensity and the content of exercises also varied.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It needs to be noted that the operationalization of assessing fatigue, alertness, and mood state may be the main cause of the mixed study results. For instance, we measured them via a questionnaire that contains one question for each variable, while others measured fatigue using other questionnaires or measured alertness objectively via psychomotor vigilance testing [44]. Additionally, the intensity and the content of exercises also varied.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This cluster focuses on the cognitive benefits, but the concerns of the small number of studies and large heterogeneity and the time-course of effects on cognition, following HIIE, are not well-understood. Moreover, in a special setting, e.g., regular short sleep, the consensus on the cognitive performance of exercise and its potential therapeutic benefits remains contested ( Saner et al, 2020 ; Saner et al, 2023 ; You et al, 2023 ; You et al, 2023 ). MICT appears to induce more cognitive benefits than HIIT despite short sleep ( You et al, 2023 ).…”
Section: Analysis Of Hiie Research Frontiers Based On the Document Co...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Saner et al (2024) studied the effects of sleep restriction (with or without high‐intensity exercise) on behavioral alertness and mood in young healthy males. 24 healthy young males were matched into one of three, 5‐night sleep interventions: normal sleep, sleep restriction down to less than four hours or sleep restriction and exercise.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%