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Psychomotor vigilance performance predicted by E pworth S leepiness S cale scores in an operational setting with the United States N avy
Author(s) -
Shattuck Nita Lewis,
Matsangas Panagiotis
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
journal of sleep research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.297
H-Index - 117
eISSN - 1365-2869
pISSN - 0962-1105
DOI - 10.1111/jsr.12243
Subject(s) - epworth sleepiness scale , psychomotor learning , vigilance (psychology) , population , psychology , poison control , aviation medicine , medicine , medical emergency , psychiatry , cognition , polysomnography , apnea , environmental health , neuroscience , pathology
Summary It is critical in operational environments to identify individuals who are at higher risk of psychomotor performance impairments. This study assesses the utility of the Epworth Sleepiness Scale for predicting degraded psychomotor vigilance performance in an operational environment. Active duty crewmembers of a USA Navy destroyer ( N = 69, age 21–54 years) completed the Epworth Sleepiness Scale at the beginning of the data collection period. Participants wore actigraphs and completed sleep diaries for 11 days. Psychomotor vigilance tests were administered throughout the data collection period using a 3‐min version of the psychomotor vigilance test on the actigraphs. Crewmembers with elevated scores on the Epworth Sleepiness Scale (i.e. Epworth Sleepiness Scale >10) had 60% slower reaction times on average, and experienced at least 60% more lapses and false starts compared with individuals with normal Epworth Sleepiness Scale scores (i.e. Epworth Sleepiness Scale ≤10). Epworth Sleepiness Scale scores were correlated with daily time in bed ( P < 0.01), sleep ( P < 0.05), mean reaction time ( P < 0.001), response speed 1/reaction time ( P < 0.05), slowest 10% of response speed ( P < 0.001), lapses ( P < 0.01), and the sum of lapses and false starts ( P < 0.001). In this chronically sleep‐deprived population, elevated Epworth Sleepiness Scale scores identified that subset of the population who experienced degraded psychomotor vigilance performance. We theorize that Epworth Sleepiness Scale scores are an indication of personal sleep debt that varies depending on one's individual sleep requirement. In the absence of direct performance metrics, we also advocate that the Epworth Sleepiness Scale can be used to determine the prevalence of excessive sleepiness (and thereby assess the risk of performance decrements).