认知
脊髓损伤
心理学
睡眠剥夺对认知功能的影响
睡眠(系统调用)
联想(心理学)
人口
就寝时间
心理信息
毒物控制
物理医学与康复
听力学
医学
精神科
脊髓
梅德林
法学
心理治疗师
操作系统
环境卫生
计算机科学
政治学
作者
Noelle E. Carlozzi,Jonathan P. Troost,Ivan Molton,Dawn M. Ehde,Jenna Freedman,Jie Cao,Jennifer A. Miner,Kayvan Najarian,Anna L. Kratz
摘要
While there is evidence in other clinical groups to suggest that sleep problems can negatively impact cognitive performance, this relationship has not yet been examined in people with spinal cord injury (SCI). Thus, we sought to examine the association between sleep and cognitive function in people with SCI.Over the course of 7 days, 167 individuals with SCI completed daily subjective ratings of sleep (sleep quality, number of hours slept per night, and bedtime variability) and wore a wrist-worn device that continuously monitored autonomic nervous system (ANS) activity (i.e., blood volume pulse [BVP] signal and electrodermal activity [EDA] signal). At the end of this home monitoring period, participants completed a subjective rating of cognition and six objective cognitive tests. A series of multivariable linear regressions were used to examine associations between eight measures of sleep/ANS activity during sleep and eight cognitive variables.Subjective ratings of sleep were not related to either objective cognitive performance or self-reported cognitive function. However, there were some relationships between ANS activity during sleep and objective cognitive performance: lower BVP signal was associated with poorer performance on measures of processing speed, working memory, learning and long-term memory, and EDA signals were associated with poorer performance on a measure of executive function.Future work is needed to better understand the relationship of sleep, especially sleep physiology, and cognitive functioning for individuals with SCI, and how that may be similar or different to relationships in the general population. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).
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