Jackson Melinda L, Croft Rodney J, Owens Katherine, Pierce Robert J, Kennedy Gerard A, Crewther David, Howard Mark E
Brain Sciences Institute, Swinburne University of Technology, Melbourne, Australia.
Sleep. 2008 Sep;31(9):1261-9.
Previous studies have demonstrated that as little as 18 hours of sleep deprivation can cause deleterious effects on performance. It has also been suggested that sleep deprivation can cause a "tunnel-vision" effect, in which attention is restricted to the center of the visual field. The current study aimed to replicate these behavioral effects and to examine the electrophysiological underpinnings of these changes.
Repeated-measures experimental study.
University laboratory.
Nineteen professional drivers (1 woman; mean age = 45.3 +/- 9.1 years).
Two experimental sessions were performed; one following 27 hours of sleep deprivation and the other following a normal night of sleep, with control for circadian effects.
MEASUREMENTS & RESULTS: A tunnel-vision task (central versus peripheral visual discrimination) and a standard checkerboard-viewing task were performed while 32-channel EEG was recorded. For the tunnel-vision task, sleep deprivation resulted in an overall slowing of reaction times and increased errors of omission for both peripheral and foveal stimuli (P < 0.05). These changes were related to reduced P300 amplitude (indexing cognitive processing) but not measures of early visual processing. No evidence was found for an interaction effect between sleep deprivation and visual-field position, either in terms of behavior or electrophysiological responses. Slower processing of the sustained parvocellular visual pathway was demonstrated.
These findings suggest that performance deficits on visual tasks during sleep deprivation are due to higher cognitive processes rather than early visual processing. Sleep deprivation may differentially impair processing of more-detailed visual information. Features of the study design (eg, visual angle, duration of sleep deprivation) may influence whether peripheral visual-field neglect occurs.
以往研究表明,仅18小时的睡眠剥夺就会对表现产生有害影响。也有人提出,睡眠剥夺会导致一种“管状视野”效应,即注意力被限制在视野中心。本研究旨在重现这些行为效应,并探究这些变化的电生理基础。
重复测量实验研究。
大学实验室。
19名职业司机(1名女性;平均年龄 = 45.3 ± 9.1岁)。
进行了两个实验环节;一个在睡眠剥夺27小时后进行,另一个在正常夜间睡眠后进行,并控制了昼夜节律效应。
在记录32通道脑电图的同时,进行了一项管状视野任务(中央视觉与周边视觉辨别)和一项标准棋盘观看任务。对于管状视野任务,睡眠剥夺导致反应时间总体减慢,周边和中央凹刺激的遗漏错误均增加(P < 0.05)。这些变化与P300波幅降低(指示认知加工)有关,但与早期视觉加工指标无关。无论是在行为方面还是电生理反应方面,均未发现睡眠剥夺与视野位置之间存在交互作用的证据。结果表明持续性小细胞视觉通路的加工速度减慢。
这些发现表明,睡眠剥夺期间视觉任务的表现缺陷是由于较高层次的认知过程而非早期视觉加工。睡眠剥夺可能会差异性地损害对更详细视觉信息的加工。研究设计的特征(例如,视角、睡眠剥夺持续时间)可能会影响是否会出现周边视野忽视。