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Featured researches published by H Van Dongen.


Accident Analysis & Prevention | 2018

Cognitive flexibility: A distinct element of performance impairment due to sleep deprivation

Kimberly A. Honn; John M. Hinson; Paul Whitney; H Van Dongen

In around-the-clock operations, reduced alertness due to circadian misalignment and sleep loss causes performance impairment, which can lead to catastrophic errors and accidents. There is mounting evidence that performance on different tasks is differentially affected, but the general principles underlying this differentiation are not well understood. One factor that may be particularly relevant is the degree to which tasks require executive control, that is, control over the initiation, monitoring, and termination of actions in order to achieve goals. A key aspect of this is cognitive flexibility, i.e., the deployment of cognitive control resources to adapt to changes in events. Loss of cognitive flexibility due to sleep deprivation has been attributed to feedback blunting, meaning that feedback on behavioral outcomes has reduced salience - and that feedback is therefore less effective at driving behavior modification under changing circumstances. The cognitive mechanisms underlying feedback blunting are as yet unknown. Here we present data from an experiment that investigated the effects of sleep deprivation on performance after an unexpected reversal of stimulus-response mappings, requiring cognitive flexibility to maintain good performance. Nineteen healthy young adults completed a 4-day in-laboratory study. Subjects were randomized to either a total sleep deprivation condition (nu202f=u202f11) or a control condition (nu202f=u202f8). Athree-phase reversal learning decision task was administered at baseline, and again after 30.5u202fh of sleep deprivation, or matching well-rested control. The task was based on a go/no go task paradigm, in which stimuli were assigned to either a go (response) set or a no go (no response) set. Each phase of the task included four stimuli (two in the go set and two in the no go set). After each stimulus presentation, subjects could make a response within 750u202fms or withhold their response. They were then shown feedback on the accuracy of their response. In phase 1 of the task, subjects were explicitly told which stimuli were assigned to the go and no go sets. In phases 2 and 3, new stimuli were used that were different from those used in phase 1. Subjects were not explicitly told the go/no go mappings and were instead required to use accuracy feedback to learn which stimuli were in the go and nogo sets. Phase 3 continued directly from phase 2 and retained the same stimuli as in phase 2, but there was an unannounced reversal of the stimulus-response mappings. Task results confirmed that sleep deprivation resulted in loss of cognitive flexibility through feedback blunting, and that this effect was not produced solely by (1) general performance impairment because of overwhelming sleep drive; (2) reduced working memory resources available to perform the task; (3) incomplete learning of stimulus-response mappings before the unannounced reversal; or (4) interference with stimulus identification through lapses in vigilant attention. Overall, the results suggest that sleep deprivation causes a fundamental problem with dynamic attentional control. This element of performance impairment due to sleep deprivation appears to be distinct from vigilant attention deficits, and represents a particularly significant challenge for fatigue risk management.


Encyclopedia of Sleep | 2013

Age and Individual Determinants of Cognitive Effects of Sleep Loss

Pia Forsman; H Van Dongen

Older individuals appear to be relatively resilient to cognitive impairment when sleep deprived. Several explanations have been proposed, including bias toward preserving performance accuracy at the cost of speed, reduced amplitude of circadian rhythm, and slower buildup of sleep pressure during wakefulness. These aging effects are overshadowed by individual differences in performance impairment due to sleep loss that are unrelated to age. Such individual differences are stable and robust, constituting a phenotype. Baseline brain activation levels and some gene polymorphisms predict this phenotype to some extent, but much of the variability in resilience to impairment from sleep deprivation remains unexplained.


Sleep | 2005

Physiologic indexes in chronic insomnia during a constant routine : Evidence for general hyperarousal?

Michael Varkevisser; H Van Dongen; G.A. Kerkhof


Sleep | 2018

0020 TLR4 Genotype Is Associated with Nocturnal Sleep Duration and Consolidation

N A Sherazi; Samantha M. Riedy; Brieann C. Satterfield; Michelle A. Schmidt; Jonathan P. Wisor; H Van Dongen


Sleep | 2018

0214 Paradoxical Effect of Stimulus Density on PVT Time-on-Task Effect during Sleep Deprivation

Kimberly A. Honn; H Van Dongen


Sleep | 2018

0169 Distinct Dimensions in Psychomotor Vigilance Test (PVT) Metrics

Samantha M. Riedy; H Van Dongen


Sleep | 2018

0038 Separating Circadian- and Behavior-Driven Metabolite Rhythms in Simulated Shift Work

H Van Dongen; Shobhan Gaddameedhi; Namrata R. Chowdhury; Elena Skornyakov; Rajendra P. Gajula; Benita Middleton; Brieann C. Satterfield; Kenneth I. Porter; Debra J. Skene


Sleep | 2018

0017 Genetic Polymorphisms Of Sleep Resilency, Sleep Intensity, Morning Preference, And Caffeine Sensitivity Are Not Associated With Neurobehavioral Performance Under Repeated Cycles Of Total Sleep Deprivation

A Brager; Devon A. Grant; Brieann C. Satterfield; Ruthie H. Ratcliffe; Vincent F. Capaldi; Thomas J. Balkin; H Van Dongen; M Petrovick


Sleep | 2017

0003 DAT1 GENOTYPE MODULATES THE TIME-ON-TASK EFFECT ON THE PVT DURING TOTAL SLEEP DEPRIVATION

Brieann C. Satterfield; Jonathan P. Wisor; Michelle A. Schmidt; H Van Dongen


Sleep | 2017

0259 SLEEP DEPRIVATION EFFECTS ON THE DIGIT SYMBOL SUBSTITUTION TEST: GENERAL COGNITIVE SLOWING OR WAKE STATE INSTABILITY?

Kimberly A. Honn; H Van Dongen

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Samantha M. Riedy

Washington State University Spokane

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Kimberly A. Honn

Washington State University Spokane

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Devon A. Grant

Washington State University Spokane

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John M. Hinson

Washington State University

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Jonathan P. Wisor

Washington State University Spokane

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Michelle A. Schmidt

Washington State University Spokane

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Paul Whitney

Washington State University

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A Brager

Walter Reed Army Institute of Research

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Allan I. Pack

University of Pennsylvania

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