Song Yixuan, Huang Yuchen, Gao Yinge, Zhang Mingming, Shao Yongcong, Zhou Guangdong, Sun Hongqiang, Wang Guibin, Jia Tianye, Shi Jie, Sun Yan
Department of Neurobiology, School of Basic Medical Sciences, National Institute on Drug Dependence, Peking University, Beijing 100191, China.
Beijing Key Laboratory of Drug Dependence Research, Peking University, Beijing 100191, China.
J Neurosci. 2025 Apr 16;45(16):e1683242025. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1683-24.2025.
Effective stress management is crucial for optimal competition performance in athletes. Sleep deprivation (SD) can elevate physiological and psychological stress, and the SD-changed cognitive and emotion may reflect stress management capability and hold the predictive possibility for athletes' performance in official competitions over some time; however, it lacks evidence. Here, we aim to increase stress level for athletes by 24 h SD and identify the predictive effects of cognitive and emotional changes after 24 h SD on sports performance in official competitions over ∼1.5 months. Sixty-five winter sports athletes (35 males) were recruited from college (test set) and professional athletes (validation set) separately. The anxiety and cortisol levels were assessed at baseline, after 24 h SD, and official competition. Athletes underwent cognitive tasks (Stroop, Go/No-Go, Competitive Reaction Time Task, and Iowa Gambling Task) and the event-related potential recording at baseline and after SD. Competition performance levels (supernormal, normal, and abnormal) were categorized based on a consensus of subjective and objective evaluations. We found anxiety and cortisol levels following 24 h SD were equaled with those observed in official competition. Notably, only the decreased incongruent Stroop response after 24 h SD was negatively associated with performance in official competition. The corresponding P3 component, particularly the delta frequency at the central lobe, largely mediated this effect. These findings highlight that athletes who effectively employ cognitive skills to manage stress under acute SD tend to exhibit superior performance.
有效的压力管理对于运动员的最佳比赛表现至关重要。睡眠剥夺(SD)会加剧生理和心理压力,而睡眠剥夺导致的认知和情绪变化可能反映压力管理能力,并在一段时间内对运动员在正式比赛中的表现具有预测可能性;然而,目前缺乏相关证据。在此,我们旨在通过24小时睡眠剥夺来提高运动员的压力水平,并确定24小时睡眠剥夺后认知和情绪变化对约1.5个月内正式比赛中运动表现的预测作用。分别从大学生(测试组)和职业运动员(验证组)中招募了65名冬季项目运动员(35名男性)。在基线、24小时睡眠剥夺后以及正式比赛时评估焦虑和皮质醇水平。运动员在基线和睡眠剥夺后进行认知任务(斯特鲁普任务、停止信号任务、竞争反应时任务和爱荷华赌博任务)以及事件相关电位记录。根据主观和客观评估的共识对比赛表现水平(超常、正常和异常)进行分类。我们发现,24小时睡眠剥夺后的焦虑和皮质醇水平与正式比赛中的水平相当。值得注意的是,只有24小时睡眠剥夺后不一致的斯特鲁普反应减少与正式比赛中的表现呈负相关。相应的P3成分,特别是中央叶的δ频率,在很大程度上介导了这种效应。这些发现突出表明,在急性睡眠剥夺情况下能够有效运用认知技能来管理压力的运动员往往表现更出色。