Comparative utility of instruments for monitoring sleepiness-related performance decrements in the operational environment.

Author(s)
Balkin, T.J. Bliese, P.D. Belenky, G. Sing, H. Thorne, D.R. Thomas, M. Redmond, D.P. Russo, M. & Wesensten, N.J.
Year
Abstract

As both military and co mmercial operations increasingly become continuous, 24-h-per-day enterprises, the likelihood of operator errors or inefficiencies caused by sleep loss and/or circadian desynchrony also increases. Avoidance of such incidents requires the timely application of appropriate interventions – which, in turn, depend on the ability to measure and monitor the performance capacity of individuals in the operational environment. Several factors determine the potential suitability of candidate measures, including their relative sensitivity, reliability, content validity, intrusiveness and cumbersomeness/fieldability. In the present study, the relative sensi tivity (defined as the ratio of effect size to 95% confidence interval) of several measures to the effects of sleep loss was comp ared in a sleep restriction experiment, in which groups were allowed 3, 5, 7, or 9 h time in bed (TIB) across seven consecutive nights. Of the measures compared, the Psychomotor Vigilance Test was amon g the most sensitive to sleep restriction, was among the most reliable with no evidence of learning over repeated administrations, and possesses characteristics that make it among the most practical for use in the operational environment. (Author/publisher)

Publication

Library number
20210169 ST [electronic version only]
Source

Journal of Sleep Research, Vol. 13 (2004), No. 3 (September), p. 219-227, ref.

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This publication is one of our other publications, and part of our extensive collection of road safety literature, that also includes the SWOV publications.