The Cumulative Cost of Additional Wakefulness: Dose-Response Effects on Neurobehavioral Functions and Sleep Physiology From Chronic Sleep Restriction and Total Sleep Deprivation
University of Pennsylvania · Hadassah Medical Center
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Abstract
Objectives
To inform the debate over whether human sleep can be chronically reduced without consequences, we conducted a dose-response chronic sleep restriction experiment in which waking neurobehavioral and sleep physiological functions were monitored and compared to those for total sleep deprivation.
Design
The chronic sleep restriction experiment involved randomization to one of three sleep doses (4 h, 6 h, or 8 h time in bed per night), which were maintained for 14 consecutive days. The total sleep deprivation experiment involved 3 nights without sleep (0 h time in bed). Each study also involved 3 baseline (pre-deprivation) days and 3 recovery days.
Citation impact
3,128
total citations
- FWCI
- 84.90
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 42
Citations per year
Authors
4Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Sleep (system call)
- Sleep restriction
- Sleep deprivation
- Wakefulness
- Sleep debt
- Privation
- Medicine
- Insomnia
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