Department of Psychology, Washington State University, Pullman, WA, USA.
Prog Brain Res. 2010;185:37-48. doi: 10.1016/B978-0-444-53702-7.00003-8.
Controlled laboratory studies of the effects of sleep deprivation on cognition have the potential to further our understanding of why some complex tasks are more affected by lack of sleep than other tasks. However, apparently simple cognitive tasks reflect multiple cognitive processes at once. Some of the component processes involved in a task may be more affected by sleep deprivation than others. Thus, interpreting measures of overall performance without consideration of the specific task requirements can lead to misleading conclusions. Using examples from studies of attention, working memory and executive functioning, we demonstrate the importance of analysing how different task components contribute to performance and how the nature of the stimulus content can influence outcomes of sleep deprivation studies. Recent developments in cognitive neuropsychology may help sleep researchers conduct more precise tests of fatigue effects on cognition. In turn, studies of sleep and cognition hold promise as a strategy for the development of better general models of how the cognitive system adjusts dynamically to impairments in processing.
对睡眠剥夺对认知影响的受控实验室研究有可能进一步加深我们对为什么某些复杂任务比其他任务更容易受到睡眠不足影响的理解。然而,表面上简单的认知任务同时反映了多种认知过程。任务中涉及的某些组成过程可能比其他过程更容易受到睡眠剥夺的影响。因此,如果不考虑特定任务的要求来解释整体表现的衡量标准,可能会导致误导性的结论。我们将通过注意力、工作记忆和执行功能研究的例子来说明分析不同任务组成部分如何对表现产生影响,以及刺激内容的性质如何影响睡眠剥夺研究结果的重要性。认知神经心理学的最新发展可能有助于睡眠研究人员对认知疲劳效应进行更精确的测试。反过来,睡眠和认知研究有望成为一种策略,以更好地建立认知系统如何动态调整以适应处理障碍的一般模型。