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Y. Harrison & J.A. Horne A LEXANDRA T HOMSON
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I NTRODUCTION Other tests have used sleep-deprived volunteers that are previously well trained in the task procedure minimize “practice effects” Failed to consider that eventually the task becomes uninteresting Boredom (Kjellberg, 1977; Wilkinson, 1961)
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I NTRODUCTION Therefore, Harrison and Horne attempted to reduce boredom and sleepiness to specifically examine sleep loss effects on cognitive processes associated with temporal memory
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R ESEARCH Q UESTION Does sleep deprivation have an effect on temporal memory? Note: Temporal memory = memory for when events occur (eg. recency of presentation)
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M ETHODS
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P ARTICIPANTS 40 individuals 20 males, 20 females Mean age 23.4 years (range 18-34 years old) Non-smokers, not heavy drinkers No sleep or medical problems Moderate caffeine drinkers (100-400 mg /day)
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R ANDOMLY A SSIGNED G ROUPS Control Groups Non-Sleep- Deprived plus Placebo Non-Sleep- Deprived plus Caffeine Experimental Groups Sleep-Deprived plus Placebo Sleep-Deprived plus Caffeine
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S LEEP Sleep was monitored by actimeter Sleep deprivation groups stayed in lab overnight and were monitored by two assistants no sleeping
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C AFFEINE OR D ECAF 350 mg anhydrous caffeine dissolved in 200mL decaffeinated coffee in 2 doses for caffeine groups Placebo groups had decaffeinated coffee
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T IME OF T ESTING Tested between 19:30 hr and 20:30 hr on the second day (ie. After 35 hour sleep deprivation for sleep deprivation groups) Circadian acrophase: feel most alert
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T ASKS Coloured photographs of unfamiliar faces. List A and B, each containing 12 faces. Shown sequentially, one every 10 s. Self-ordered pointing task (distraction/way to occupy them in a standard way) during interim period that lasted 5 minutes 48 faces shown (including 24 from list A and B).
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Q UESTIONS Seen face before ? recognition memory If yes, from list A or list B ? recency discrimination (ie. Temporal memory)
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C ONFIDENCE J UDGEMENTS Ratings separated for right and wrong responses (“accuracy”) 5-point scale 5= 100% certain (that I am correct) 4= Very certain 3= Quite certain 2= Not very certain 1= Just guessing
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S UBJECTIVE S LEEPINESS Karolinska Sleepiness Scale (9-point scale) 9= Very sleepy, great effort to keep awake, fighting sleep 8= Sleepy, some effort to stay awake 7= Sleepy, no effort to stay awake 6= Some signs of sleepiness 5= Neither alert nor sleepy 4= Some signs of alertness 3= Alert 2= Very alert 1= Extremely alert
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R ESULTS
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Sleep-deprived caffeine group was significantly less sleepy (ie. More alert) than the sleep-deprived placebo group.
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F IGURE 1. M EAN SUBJECTIVE SLEEPINESS (K AROLINSKA S LEEPINESS S CALE ) SCORES THROUGHOUT DAY 2 FOR SD C AND SD P
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Figure 2. Mean and standard deviation for d’ (recognition). Mean and standard deviation for z sensitivity (recency)
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R ESULTS Recognition High scores indicate a high level of hits with low false positives Sleep deprivation did not have a significant effect Recency High scores indicate good performance Sleep deprivation significantly impaired temporal memory Sleep-deprived group with caffeine scored higher than sleep-deprived placebo group Non-sleep-deprived groups did the best
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C ONFIDENCE AND A CCURACY Sleep deprivation increased belief that they were correct Especially when they were wrong Caffeine had no significant effect on confidence judgements
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D ISCUSSION Optimum performance circumstances (novel test, short, circadian acrophase, caffeine) still significant impairment of temporal memory Research has shown that temporal memory depends on pre-frontal cortex (lesion studies and patients with damaged pre-frontal cortex poor recency discrimination, no effect on recognition) Daum, Graber, Schugens, and Mayes (1996), McIntosh, Grady, Haxby, Ungerleider, and Horwitz (1996); Milner, Corsi, and Leonard, (1991) Do the present findings indicate that sleep deprivation affects prefrontal cortex ?
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M Y O PINION Strengths/Pros Placebo and caffeine given double blind Equal number of males and females in each of the 4 groups Tried to reduce boredom as much as possible to ensure results were due to sleep deprivation on temporal memory Easy to read, no jargon Broken up into clear sections Limitations/Cons Small sample size (5 females and 5 males per group) No brain scans, lacking visuals Didn’t show results of actimeter Unclear if effects of sleep deprivation specifically relates to temporal memory
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F UTURE R ESEARCH Use higher doses of caffeine to see if the adverse effects of sleep deprivation on temporal memory could be eliminated Investigate if there is a dose-response relationship Do the effects relate to a more general problem with source memory? Need to look at other aspects of the encoding stage (if and when)
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Q UESTIONS
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F ULL C ITATION Harrison, Y. & Horne J.A. (2000). Sleep Loss and Temporal Memory. The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 1, 271-279.
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