Roach Gregory D, Dawson Drew, Lamond Nicole
Centre for Sleep Research, University of South Australia, Adelaide, SA, Australia.
Chronobiol Int. 2006;23(6):1379-87. doi: 10.1080/07420520601067931.
The 10 min psychomotor vigilance task (PVT) is commonly used in laboratory studies to assess the impact of sleep loss, sustained wakefulness, and/or time of day on neurobehavioral performance. In field settings, though, it may be impractical for participants to perform a test of this length. The aim of this study was to identify a performance measure that is sensitive to the effects of fatigue but less burdensome than a 10 min test. Sixteen participants (11 female, 5 male; mean age = 21.7 years) slept in the sleep laboratory overnight then remained awake for 28 h from 08:00 h. During every second hour, participants completed three PVTs of differing duration (10 min, 5 min, 90 sec). For the 5 min/10 min comparison, ANOVA indicated that response time was significantly affected by test length (F1,14 = 26.9, p < .001) and hours of wakefulness (F13,182 = 46.1, p < .001) but not by their interaction (F13,182 = 1.7, ns). There was a strong correlation between response time on the 5 and 10 min PVTs (r = .88, p < .001). For the 90 sec/10 min comparison, ANOVA indicated that response time was significantly affected by test length (F1,14 = 65.9, p < .001) and hours of wakefulness (F13,182 = 29.7, p < .001) as well as by their interaction (F13,182 = 6.0, p < .001). There was a strong correlation between response time on the 90 sec and 10 min PVTs (r = .77, p < .001). The effects of hours of wakefulness on neurobehavioral performance were similar for the 5 min and 10 min PVTs. In contrast, performance on the 90 sec PVT was less affected by hours of wakefulness than on the 10 min PVT. In addition, performance on the 10 min PVT was more highly correlated with the 5 min PVT than the 90 sec PVT. These data indicate that the 5 min PVT may provide a reasonable substitute for the 10 min PVT in circumstances where a test shorter than 10 min is required.
10分钟心理运动警觉任务(PVT)常用于实验室研究,以评估睡眠剥夺、持续清醒和/或一天中的时间对神经行为表现的影响。然而,在现场环境中,让参与者进行如此长时间的测试可能不切实际。本研究的目的是确定一种对疲劳影响敏感但比10分钟测试负担更小的表现测量方法。16名参与者(11名女性,5名男性;平均年龄 = 21.7岁)在睡眠实验室过夜,然后从08:00起保持清醒28小时。每隔一小时,参与者完成三个不同时长(10分钟、5分钟、90秒)的PVT。对于5分钟/10分钟的比较,方差分析表明反应时间受测试时长(F1,14 = 26.9,p <.001)和清醒时长(F13,182 = 46.1,p <.001)的显著影响,但不受它们的交互作用影响(F13,182 = 1.7,无显著性差异)。5分钟和10分钟PVT的反应时间之间存在很强的相关性(r =.88,p <.001)。对于90秒/10分钟的比较,方差分析表明反应时间受测试时长(F1,14 = 65.9,p <.001)、清醒时长(F13,182 = 29.7,p <.001)以及它们的交互作用影响(F13,182 = 6.0,p <.001)。90秒和10分钟PVT的反应时间之间存在很强的相关性(r =.77,p <.001)。5分钟和10分钟PVT中清醒时长对神经行为表现的影响相似。相比之下,90秒PVT的表现受清醒时长的影响小于10分钟PVT。此外,10分钟PVT的表现与5分钟PVT的相关性高于与90秒PVT的相关性。这些数据表明,在需要短于10分钟测试的情况下,5分钟PVT可能是10分钟PVT的合理替代方法。