Santhi Nayantara, Lazar Alpar S, McCabe Patrick J, Lo June C, Groeger John A, Dijk Derk-Jan
Surrey Sleep Research Centre, Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences, University of Surrey, Guildford, Surrey GU2 7XH, United Kingdom;
Surrey Sleep Research Centre, Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences, University of Surrey, Guildford, Surrey GU2 7XH, United Kingdom; Department of Clinical Neurosciences, University of Cambridge, Cambridge CB2 1TN, United Kingdom;
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2016 May 10;113(19):E2730-9. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1521637113. Epub 2016 Apr 18.
The sleep-wake cycle and circadian rhythmicity both contribute to brain function, but whether this contribution differs between men and women and how it varies across cognitive domains and subjective dimensions has not been established. We examined the circadian and sleep-wake-dependent regulation of cognition in 16 men and 18 women in a forced desynchrony protocol and quantified the separate contributions of circadian phase, prior sleep, and elapsed time awake on cognition and sleep. The largest circadian effects were observed for reported sleepiness, mood, and reported effort; the effects on working memory and temporal processing were smaller. Although these effects were seen in both men and women, there were quantitative differences. The amplitude of the circadian modulation was larger in women in 11 of 39 performance measures so that their performance was more impaired in the early morning hours. Principal components analysis of the performance measures yielded three factors, accuracy, effort, and speed, which reflect core performance characteristics in a range of cognitive tasks and therefore are likely to be important for everyday performance. The largest circadian modulation was observed for effort, whereas accuracy exhibited the largest sex difference in circadian modulation. The sex differences in the circadian modulation of cognition could not be explained by sex differences in the circadian amplitude of plasma melatonin and electroencephalographic slow-wave activity. These data establish the impact of circadian rhythmicity and sex on waking cognition and have implications for understanding the regulation of brain function, cognition, and affect in shift-work, jetlag, and aging.
睡眠-觉醒周期和昼夜节律都对脑功能有影响,但这种影响在男性和女性之间是否存在差异,以及如何在不同认知领域和主观维度上变化,目前尚未明确。我们采用强制失同步方案,对16名男性和18名女性的昼夜节律和依赖睡眠-觉醒的认知调节进行了研究,并量化了昼夜节律相位、先前睡眠和清醒时长对认知和睡眠的单独影响。在报告的嗜睡、情绪和报告的努力程度方面观察到最大的昼夜节律效应;对工作记忆和时间处理的影响较小。尽管在男性和女性中都观察到了这些效应,但存在数量上的差异。在39项表现指标中的11项中,女性昼夜节律调节的幅度更大,因此她们在清晨时分的表现受损更严重。对表现指标进行主成分分析得出了三个因素,即准确性、努力程度和速度,它们反映了一系列认知任务中的核心表现特征,因此可能对日常表现很重要。在努力程度方面观察到最大的昼夜节律调节,而准确性在昼夜节律调节方面表现出最大的性别差异。认知昼夜节律调节中的性别差异无法用血浆褪黑素昼夜节律幅度和脑电图慢波活动的性别差异来解释。这些数据证实了昼夜节律和性别对清醒认知的影响,并对理解轮班工作、时差反应和衰老过程中脑功能、认知和情感的调节具有启示意义。