Neuroimaging Center, McLean Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Belmont, MA, USA.
Prog Brain Res. 2010;185:105-29. doi: 10.1016/B978-0-444-53702-7.00007-5.
Sleep deprivation is commonplace in modern society, but its far-reaching effects on cognitive performance are only beginning to be understood from a scientific perspective. While there is broad consensus that insufficient sleep leads to a general slowing of response speed and increased variability in performance, particularly for simple measures of alertness, attention and vigilance, there is much less agreement about the effects of sleep deprivation on many higher level cognitive capacities, including perception, memory and executive functions. Central to this debate has been the question of whether sleep deprivation affects nearly all cognitive capacities in a global manner through degraded alertness and attention, or whether sleep loss specifically impairs some aspects of cognition more than others. Neuroimaging evidence has implicated the prefrontal cortex as a brain region that may be particularly susceptible to the effects of sleep loss, but perplexingly, executive function tasks that putatively measure prefrontal functioning have yielded inconsistent findings within the context of sleep deprivation. Whereas many convergent and rule-based reasoning, decision making and planning tasks are relatively unaffected by sleep loss, more creative, divergent and innovative aspects of cognition do appear to be degraded by lack of sleep. Emerging evidence suggests that some aspects of higher level cognitive capacities remain degraded by sleep deprivation despite restoration of alertness and vigilance with stimulant countermeasures, suggesting that sleep loss may affect specific cognitive systems above and beyond the effects produced by global cognitive declines or impaired attentional processes. Finally, the role of emotion as a critical facet of cognition has received increasing attention in recent years and mounting evidence suggests that sleep deprivation may particularly affect cognitive systems that rely on emotional data. Thus, the extent to which sleep deprivation affects a particular cognitive process may depend on several factors, including the magnitude of global decline in general alertness and attention, the degree to which the specific cognitive function depends on emotion-processing networks, and the extent to which that cognitive process can draw upon associated cortical regions for compensatory support.
睡眠剥夺在现代社会中很常见,但从科学角度来看,其对认知表现的深远影响才刚刚开始被理解。虽然人们普遍认为睡眠不足会导致反应速度普遍减慢,表现的可变性增加,特别是对警觉性、注意力和警惕性等简单的测量指标,但对于睡眠剥夺对许多更高层次的认知能力的影响,包括感知、记忆和执行功能,人们的看法就没那么一致了。这场争论的核心问题是,睡眠剥夺是否通过降低警觉性和注意力,以全局的方式影响几乎所有的认知能力,还是睡眠不足会特别损害某些方面的认知能力。神经影像学证据表明,前额叶皮层是一个可能特别容易受到睡眠不足影响的大脑区域,但令人费解的是,在睡眠剥夺的背景下,那些推测用来测量前额叶功能的执行功能任务得出的结果却不一致。虽然许多基于规则的推理、决策和规划任务相对不受睡眠不足的影响,但认知的创造性、发散性和创新性方面似乎确实因缺乏睡眠而受到影响。新出现的证据表明,尽管使用兴奋剂等对策恢复了警觉性和警惕性,但一些更高层次的认知能力的某些方面仍因睡眠剥夺而受到损害,这表明睡眠不足可能会影响特定的认知系统,而不仅仅是由整体认知下降或注意力受损过程产生的影响。最后,情绪作为认知的一个关键方面近年来受到了越来越多的关注,越来越多的证据表明,睡眠剥夺可能特别影响依赖情绪数据的认知系统。因此,睡眠剥夺对特定认知过程的影响程度可能取决于几个因素,包括一般警觉性和注意力的整体下降程度、特定认知功能对情绪处理网络的依赖程度,以及该认知过程在多大程度上可以利用相关的皮质区域进行补偿性支持。