Don Stuss’s research while affiliated with University of Ottawa and other places

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Publications (1)


Changes in cognitive processing following short-term cumulative partial sleep deprivation and recovery oversleeping
  • Article

December 1980

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38 Reads

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65 Citations

Journal of Clinical Neuropsychology

Joel Herscovitch

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Don Stuss

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The effects on cognitive processing of 1 and 5 cumulative nights of partial sleep deprivation (PSD) and 1 and 2 nights of subsequent recovery oversleep was studied using an anagrams test and the Wisconsin Card Sorting Test. Seven paid undergraduate volunteers (5 male; 2 female) aged 18–23 who had normative 6.5–8.0 hr sleep patterns participated. They followed an 8-day schedule of morning and afternoon testing sessions consisting of 2 days in each of the experimental conditions: prebase-line, PSD, recovery sleep, and postbaseline. Sleep duration was calculated relative to individual habitual by subtracting 40% per night (PSD) and adding 40% and 20%, respectively (recovery sleep). On the anagrams test, results showed exaggerated time of day differences during both sleep manipulation conditions. Card-sorting performance was characterized by lesser efficiency of cognitive strategies (> non-perseverative errors) during recovery sleep and tendency towards perseveration with sleep loss. Results were discussed with particular reference to hypothesized neural substrates and clinical implications.

Citations (1)


... Another reason could be due to situations like being sick, being highly stressed, or simply being already fatigued from overworking. Regardless, Herscovitch et al. [88] revealed that both sleep deprivation and recovery oversleeping cause a decline in cognitive performance. ...

Reference:

Cognitive Performance Measurements and the Impact of Sleep Quality Using Wearable and Mobile Sensors
Changes in cognitive processing following short-term cumulative partial sleep deprivation and recovery oversleeping
  • Citing Article
  • December 1980

Journal of Clinical Neuropsychology