Effects of task duration on sensitivity to sleep deprivation using the multi-attribute task battery |
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Authors: | John A. Caldwell Stephanie Ramspott |
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Affiliation: | 1. U.S. Army Aeromedical Research Laboratory, P.O. Box 620577, 36362-0577, Fort Rucker, AL
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Abstract: | Several factors affect the sensitivity to sleep deprivation in the performance of computerized tests. Two of these are task complexity and duration. Complexity can improve sensitivity by increasing the demands required to complete the task, but it can also decrease sensitivity by improving the subject’s motivation. The effects of task duration are more predictable in that longer tests generally are more susceptible to deprivation effects than shorter ones. The impact of task duration on an interesting, but complex, aviation simulation was examined here. By breaking down data from 30-min multi-attribute task battery administrations into the first, second, and third 10 min of performance, it was shown that tests shorter than 30 min underestimate the impact of sleep loss on performance. This was especially evident in measures of time-out and tracking errors. |
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