Xu Lin, Song Tao, Peng Ziyi, Dai Cimin, Wang Letong, Shao Yongcong, Wang Lanxiang, Weng Xiechuan, Han Mengfei
School of Psychology, Beijing Sport University, Beijing 100084, China.
Rehabilitation Medicine Department of the 8th Medical Center of Chinese PLA General Hospital, Beijing 100091, China.
Brain Sci. 2022 Jun 7;12(6):746. doi: 10.3390/brainsci12060746.
Excellent response inhibition is the basis for outstanding competitive athletic performance, and sleep may be an important factor affecting athletes' response inhibition. This study investigates the effect of sleep deprivation on athletes' response inhibition, and its differentiating effect on non-athlete controls' performance, with the aim of helping athletes effectively improve their response inhibition ability through sleep pattern manipulation. Behavioral and event-related potential (ERP) data were collected from 36 participants (16 table tennis athletes and 20 general college students) after 36 h of sleep deprivation using ERP techniques and a stop-signal task. Sleep deprivation's different effects on response inhibition in the two groups were explored through repeated-measures ANOVA. Behavioral data showed that in a baseline state, stop-signal response time was significantly faster in table tennis athletes than in non-athlete controls, and appeared significantly longer after sleep deprivation in both groups. ERP results showed that at baseline state, N2, ERN, and P3 amplitudes were lower in table tennis athletes than in non-athlete controls, and corresponding significant decreases were observed in non-athlete controls after 36 h of sleep deprivation. Table tennis athletes showed a decrease in P3 amplitude and no significant difference in N2 and ERN amplitudes, after 36 h of sleep deprivation compared to the baseline state. Compared to non-athlete controls, table tennis athletes had better response inhibition, and the adverse effects of sleep deprivation on response inhibition occurred mainly in the later top-down motor inhibition process rather than in earlier automated conflict detection and monitoring.
出色的反应抑制能力是竞技体育卓越表现的基础,而睡眠可能是影响运动员反应抑制能力的重要因素。本研究旨在通过操控睡眠模式帮助运动员有效提高其反应抑制能力,调查睡眠剥夺对运动员反应抑制能力的影响及其对非运动员对照组表现的差异影响。采用事件相关电位(ERP)技术和停止信号任务,在36小时睡眠剥夺后,从36名参与者(16名乒乓球运动员和20名普通大学生)收集行为学和ERP数据。通过重复测量方差分析探讨睡眠剥夺对两组反应抑制的不同影响。行为学数据显示,在基线状态下,乒乓球运动员的停止信号反应时间显著快于非运动员对照组,且两组在睡眠剥夺后均显著延长。ERP结果显示,在基线状态下,乒乓球运动员的N2、ERN和P3波幅低于非运动员对照组,非运动员对照组在36小时睡眠剥夺后相应波幅显著降低。与基线状态相比,乒乓球运动员在36小时睡眠剥夺后P3波幅降低,N2和ERN波幅无显著差异。与非运动员对照组相比,乒乓球运动员具有更好的反应抑制能力,睡眠剥夺对反应抑制的不利影响主要发生在后期自上而下的运动抑制过程中,而非早期的自动冲突检测和监测过程。