Researchers at Brigham and Women’s Hospital (BWH), a teaching
affiliate of Harvard Medical School, have found that regardless of how
tired you think you are, lack of sleep can influence the way you do
certain tasks.
If you sleep only for five to six hours, it is bound to affect your work
negatively. Experts recommend eight hours of sleep for ideal health and
productivity.
Researchers at Brigham and Women’s Hospital (BWH), a teaching affiliate
of Harvard Medical School, have found that regardless of how tired you
think you are, lack of sleep can influence the way you do certain tasks.
“Our team decided to look at how sleep might affect complex visual
search tasks because they are common in safety-sensitive activities such
as air-traffic control, baggage screening and monitoring power plants,”
Jeanne F. Duffy at BWH was quoted as saying in the The Journal of
Vision.
“These types of jobs involve processes that require repeated, quick
memory encoding and retrieval of visual information, in combination with
decision making about the information,” added Duffy.
Researchers collected and analyzed data from visual search tasks from a
group of participants over one month’s study. In the first week, all
participants were scheduled to sleep 10-12 hours per night to make sure
they were well rested.
For the following three weeks, the participants were scheduled to sleep
the equivalent of 5.6 hours per night and also had their sleep times
scheduled on a 28-hour cycle, mirroring chronic jet lag.
The research team gave the participants computer tests that involved
visual search tasks and recorded how quickly the participants could find
important information, and also how accurate they were.
The longer the participants were awake, the more slowly they identified
the important information in the test, the team observed.
Additionally, during the biological night time, 12 a.m. to 6 a.m.,
participants (who were unaware of the time throughout the study)
performed the tasks more slowly than they did during the daytime.
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