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Effects of pre-sleep simulated on-call instructions on subsequent sleep

TLDR
Increased vigilance during the night causes sleep to be less efficient and less qualitative as shown by an increase in wake-activity and a distorted sleep perception.
Abstract
Nightly interventions, prevalent to on-call situations, can have negative consequences for those involved. We investigated if intervention-free-on-call-nights would also mean disturbance-free-sleep for people on-call. 16 healthy sleepers spent three nights in the laboratory: after a habituation night, reference and on-call night were counterbalanced. Subjects were instructed to react to a sound, presented at unpredictable moments during the night. Participants were unaware of the fact that the sound would never be presented. These vigilance instructions resulted in more subjective wake after sleep onset (WASO), lower subjective sleep efficiency and significantly lower experienced sleep quality. Objectively, a longer sleep onset, an increased amount of WASO and significantly lower sleep efficiency were observed. During deep sleep, significantly more beta activity was recorded. Apart from real nightly interventions increased vigilance during the night causes sleep to be less efficient and less qualitative as shown by an increase in wake-activity and a distorted sleep perception.

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OUP accepted manuscript

- 23 Feb 2022 - 
TL;DR: In this paper , the effect of pre-sleep psychosocial stress on sleep and arousal in a 90-min daytime nap, in 33 healthy female participants compared to an anticipated within-subject relaxation task, was examined.
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Stress dynamically reduces sleep depth: temporal proximity to the stressor is crucial

TL;DR: The results show that presleep cognitions directly affect sleep in temporal proximity to the stressor, and suggest that effects during late sleep originate from a repeated reactivation of mental concepts associated with the stressful event during sleep.
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Sleep and Sleepiness Measured by Diaries and Actigraphy among Norwegian and Austrian Helicopter Emergency Medical Service (HEMS) Pilots

TL;DR: The study examined sleep and sleepiness among shift working Helicopter Emergency Medical Service pilots from Norway (Norwegian Air Ambulance; NAA) and Austria (Christophorus Flugrettungverein; CFV) and found no major change in sleep or sleepiness parameters throughout the workweek was detected.
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Snoozing: an examination of a common method of waking

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors defined snoozing as using multiple alarms to accomplish waking, and considered as a method of sleep inertia reduction that utilizes the stress system, and examined the physiological effects of sleep via wearable sleep staging and heart rate activity, both over a long time scale and on the days that it occurs.
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Pre-Sleep Cognitive Arousal Is Unrelated to Sleep Misperception in Healthy Sleepers When Unexpected Sounds Are Played during Non-Rapid Eye Movement Sleep: A Polysomnography Study

TL;DR: It is suggested that in healthy sleepers, when ecologically valid noises are played unexpectedly during NREM sleep in an unfamiliar sleep laboratory environment the subjective experience of sleep is not associated with pre-sleep cognitive arousal, or negatively impacted by noise exposure.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Subjective and Objective Sleepiness in the Active Individual

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Journal ArticleDOI

Cumulative sleepiness, mood disturbance, and psychomotor vigilance performance decrements during a week of sleep restricted to 4-5 hours per night

TL;DR: It is suggested that cumulative nocturnal sleep debt had a dynamic and escalating analog in cumulative daytime sleepiness and that asymptotic or steady-state sleepiness was not achieved in response to sleep restriction.
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TL;DR: For instance, this article found that chronic insomnia affects from 20 to 40 percent of all adults, particularly women and the elderly, yet there is widespread belief that chronic chronic insomnia is not really a medical problem and that it can be treated only w
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