Comparative sensitivity of a simulated driving task to self-report, physiological, and other performance measures during prolonged wakefulness.

Author(s)
Arnedt, J.T. Geddes, M.A.C. & MacLean, A.W.
Year
Abstract

The objectives of this study were to compare (1) the sensitivity of simulated driving to self-report measures, nocturnal sleep latency tests (SLTs), and an auditory vigilance task and (2) urban and motorway driving. Healthy males 18 to 35 years maintained wakefulness for one night and were tested at 2400, 0230, 0500 and 0730 h. In Study 1 (n=11), the SLTs were followed by auditory vigilance and simulated driving tasks; in Study 2 (n=18), the SLTs were preceded and followed by simulated driving on motorway and urban routes. In Study 1, speed variability, tracking variability, and driving off the road on the driving simulator had comparable sensitivity to d' on the auditory vigilance task. In Study 2, driving performance was consistently worse on the motorway route. The driving simulator was equally sensitive to another performance measure during prolonged wakefulness and impairments were greater with motorway driving. (Author/publisher)

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Publication

Library number
C 34328 [electronic version only]
Source

Journal of Psychosomatic Research, Vol. 58 (2005), No. 1 (January), p. 61-71, 66 ref.

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