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Effects of an afternoon nap on nighttime alertness and performance in long-haul drivers
Authors:Macchi M Mila  Boulos Ziad  Ranney Thomas  Simmons Lucinda  Campbell Scott S
Affiliation:

a Institute for Circadian Physiology, 21 Bloomingdale Road, White Plains, NY 10605, USA

b Transportation Research Center Inc., PO Box B-37, East Liberty, OH 43040, USA

c Liberty Mutual Research Center for Safety and Health, 71 Frankland Road, Hopkinton, MA 01748, USA

d New York Presbyterian Hospital–Cornell Medical School, 21 Bloomingdale Road, White Plains, NY 10605, USA

Abstract:The effects of an afternoon nap on alertness and psychomotor performance were assessed during a simulated night shift. After a night of partial sleep restriction, eight professional long-haul drivers either slept (nap condition) or engaged in sedentary activities (no-nap condition) from 14:00 to 17:00 h. Alertness and performance testing sessions were conducted at 12:00 (pre-nap baseline), 24:00, 02:30, 05:00 and 07:30 h, and followed 2-h runs in a driving simulator. In the nap condition, the subjects showed lower subjective sleepiness and fatigue, as measured by visual analog scales, and faster reaction times and less variability on psychomotor performance tasks. Electrophysiological indices of arousal during the driving runs also reflected the beneficial effects of the afternoon nap, with lower spectral activity in the theta (4–7.75 Hz), alpha (8–11.75 Hz) and fast theta-slow alpha (6–9.75 Hz) frequency bands of the electroencephalogram, indicating higher arousal levels. Thus, a 3-h napping opportunity ending at 17:00 h improved significantly several indices of alertness and performance measured 7–14 h later.
Keywords:Nap  Night shift  Sleepiness  Quantitative EEG  Driving  Driving simulator  Performance
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