Sleep Deprivation Diminishes Attentional Control Effectiveness and Impairs Flexible Adaptation to Changing Conditions

Insufficient sleep is a global public health problem resulting in catastrophic accidents, increased mortality, and hundreds of billions of dollars in lost productivity. Yet the effect of sleep deprivation (SD) on decision making and performance is often underestimated by fatigued individuals and is...

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Main Authors: Whitney, Paul, Hinson, John M., Satterfield, Brieann C., Grant, Devon A., Honn, Kimberly A., Van Dongen, Hans P. A.
Other Authors: Univ Arizona, Dept Psychol, Coll Med
Language:en
Published: NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP 2017
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10150/626286
http://arizona.openrepository.com/arizona/handle/10150/626286
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spelling ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-6262862017-12-23T03:00:46Z Sleep Deprivation Diminishes Attentional Control Effectiveness and Impairs Flexible Adaptation to Changing Conditions Whitney, Paul Hinson, John M. Satterfield, Brieann C. Grant, Devon A. Honn, Kimberly A. Van Dongen, Hans P. A. Univ Arizona, Dept Psychol, Coll Med Insufficient sleep is a global public health problem resulting in catastrophic accidents, increased mortality, and hundreds of billions of dollars in lost productivity. Yet the effect of sleep deprivation (SD) on decision making and performance is often underestimated by fatigued individuals and is only beginning to be understood by scientists. The deleterious impact of SD is frequently attributed to lapses in vigilant attention, but this account fails to explain many SD-related problems, such as loss of situational awareness and perseveration. Using a laboratory study protocol, we show that SD individuals can maintain information in the focus of attention and anticipate likely correct responses, but their use of such a top-down attentional strategy is less effective at preventing errors caused by competing responses. Moreover, when the task environment requires flexibility, performance under SD suffers dramatically. The impairment in flexible shifting of attentional control we observed is distinct from lapses in vigilant attention, as corroborated by the specificity of the influence of a genetic biomarker, the dopaminergic polymorphism DRD2 C957T. Reduced effectiveness of top-down attentional control under SD, especially when conditions require flexibility, helps to explain maladaptive performance that is not readily explained by lapses in vigilant attention. 2017-11-22 Article Sleep Deprivation Diminishes Attentional Control Effectiveness and Impairs Flexible Adaptation to Changing Conditions 2017, 7 (1) Scientific Reports 2045-2322 10.1038/s41598-017-16165-z http://hdl.handle.net/10150/626286 http://arizona.openrepository.com/arizona/handle/10150/626286 Scientific Reports en http://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-017-16165-z © The Author(s) 2017. This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
description Insufficient sleep is a global public health problem resulting in catastrophic accidents, increased mortality, and hundreds of billions of dollars in lost productivity. Yet the effect of sleep deprivation (SD) on decision making and performance is often underestimated by fatigued individuals and is only beginning to be understood by scientists. The deleterious impact of SD is frequently attributed to lapses in vigilant attention, but this account fails to explain many SD-related problems, such as loss of situational awareness and perseveration. Using a laboratory study protocol, we show that SD individuals can maintain information in the focus of attention and anticipate likely correct responses, but their use of such a top-down attentional strategy is less effective at preventing errors caused by competing responses. Moreover, when the task environment requires flexibility, performance under SD suffers dramatically. The impairment in flexible shifting of attentional control we observed is distinct from lapses in vigilant attention, as corroborated by the specificity of the influence of a genetic biomarker, the dopaminergic polymorphism DRD2 C957T. Reduced effectiveness of top-down attentional control under SD, especially when conditions require flexibility, helps to explain maladaptive performance that is not readily explained by lapses in vigilant attention.
author2 Univ Arizona, Dept Psychol, Coll Med
author_facet Univ Arizona, Dept Psychol, Coll Med
Whitney, Paul
Hinson, John M.
Satterfield, Brieann C.
Grant, Devon A.
Honn, Kimberly A.
Van Dongen, Hans P. A.
author Whitney, Paul
Hinson, John M.
Satterfield, Brieann C.
Grant, Devon A.
Honn, Kimberly A.
Van Dongen, Hans P. A.
spellingShingle Whitney, Paul
Hinson, John M.
Satterfield, Brieann C.
Grant, Devon A.
Honn, Kimberly A.
Van Dongen, Hans P. A.
Sleep Deprivation Diminishes Attentional Control Effectiveness and Impairs Flexible Adaptation to Changing Conditions
author_sort Whitney, Paul
title Sleep Deprivation Diminishes Attentional Control Effectiveness and Impairs Flexible Adaptation to Changing Conditions
title_short Sleep Deprivation Diminishes Attentional Control Effectiveness and Impairs Flexible Adaptation to Changing Conditions
title_full Sleep Deprivation Diminishes Attentional Control Effectiveness and Impairs Flexible Adaptation to Changing Conditions
title_fullStr Sleep Deprivation Diminishes Attentional Control Effectiveness and Impairs Flexible Adaptation to Changing Conditions
title_full_unstemmed Sleep Deprivation Diminishes Attentional Control Effectiveness and Impairs Flexible Adaptation to Changing Conditions
title_sort sleep deprivation diminishes attentional control effectiveness and impairs flexible adaptation to changing conditions
publisher NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/10150/626286
http://arizona.openrepository.com/arizona/handle/10150/626286
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