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Mathias Basner

Researcher at University of Pennsylvania

Publications -  209
Citations -  10471

Mathias Basner is an academic researcher from University of Pennsylvania. The author has contributed to research in topics: Noise & Sleep deprivation. The author has an hindex of 41, co-authored 183 publications receiving 8052 citations. Previous affiliations of Mathias Basner include Harvard University & German Aerospace Center.

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Journal ArticleDOI

American time use survey: sleep time and its relationship to waking activities.

TL;DR: Work time, travel time, and time for socializing, relaxing, and leisure are the primary activities reciprocally related to sleep time among Americans and may be confounding the frequently observed association between short and long sleep and morbidity and mortality.
Journal ArticleDOI

WHO Environmental Noise Guidelines for the European Region: A Systematic Review on Environmental Noise and Effects on Sleep.

TL;DR: Based on the available evidence, transportation noise affects objectively measured sleep physiology and subjectively assessed sleep disturbance in adults and for children’s sleep.
Journal ArticleDOI

Validity and Sensitivity of a Brief Psychomotor Vigilance Test (PVT-B) to Total and Partial Sleep Deprivation.

TL;DR: PVT-B tracked standard 10-min PVT performance throughout both TSD and PSD, and yielded medium to large effect sizes, and may be a useful tool for assessing behavioral alertness in settings where the duration of the 10-minute PVT is considered impractical, although further validation in applied settings is needed.
Book ChapterDOI

Circadian Rhythms, Sleep Deprivation, and Human Performance

TL;DR: A key goal of this work is to identify biomarkers that accurately predict human performance in situations in which the circadian and sleep homeostatic systems are perturbed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of nighttime aircraft noise exposure on endothelial function and stress hormone release in healthy adults

TL;DR: In healthy adults, acute nighttime aircraft noise exposure dose-dependently impairs endothelial function and stimulates adrenaline release and may be one mechanism contributing to the observed association of chronic noise exposure with cardiovascular disease.