TY - JOUR
T1 - Awakening from a nighttime nap
T2 - physiological and cognitive effects of sleep inertia and behavioral countermeasures
AU - Zhang, Qing
AU - Ding, Li
AU - Wen, Yujia
AU - Chen, Wenze
AU - Zhang, Fujun
AU - Yao, Fanglai
AU - Zhao, Yuan
AU - Nie, Jiachen
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - To explore the effects of sleep inertia (SI) on physiological responses and cognitive performance, this study involved 1-h night-time sleep arousal experiments with twelve healthy participants. The KSS Scale, EEG, pulse rate (PR), blood pressure (BP), N-back test, and LRT Task were tested. The experimental design included a control condition (no intervention) and two behavioural countermeasure conditions (verbal communication and video watching). Results showed that during the first 10 min affected by SI, the EEG relative power decreased significantly by 72.1%, PR and BP increased significantly by 8.1 and 2.5%, respectively. After countermeasures, KSS scores decreased by 14.12 and 28.25%, EEG increased by 50.00 and 19.23%, the working memory increased by 24.32 and 43.24% for two countermeasures, respectively. Besides, cognitive and physiological responses affected by SI and the effects of countermeasures showed significant sex differences. Future research should explore SI effects across ages and develop more effective countermeasures to address SI.
AB - To explore the effects of sleep inertia (SI) on physiological responses and cognitive performance, this study involved 1-h night-time sleep arousal experiments with twelve healthy participants. The KSS Scale, EEG, pulse rate (PR), blood pressure (BP), N-back test, and LRT Task were tested. The experimental design included a control condition (no intervention) and two behavioural countermeasure conditions (verbal communication and video watching). Results showed that during the first 10 min affected by SI, the EEG relative power decreased significantly by 72.1%, PR and BP increased significantly by 8.1 and 2.5%, respectively. After countermeasures, KSS scores decreased by 14.12 and 28.25%, EEG increased by 50.00 and 19.23%, the working memory increased by 24.32 and 43.24% for two countermeasures, respectively. Besides, cognitive and physiological responses affected by SI and the effects of countermeasures showed significant sex differences. Future research should explore SI effects across ages and develop more effective countermeasures to address SI.
KW - cognitive performance
KW - physiological characteristics
KW - Sleep inertia
KW - subjective sleepiness
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105022308791
U2 - 10.1080/00140139.2025.2588169
DO - 10.1080/00140139.2025.2588169
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:105022308791
SN - 0014-0139
JO - Ergonomics
JF - Ergonomics
ER -