TY - JOUR
T1 - The effect of sleep restriction on cognitive performance in elite cognitive performers
T2 - A systematic review
AU - Smithies, Tim D.
AU - Toth, Adam J.
AU - Dunican, Ian C.
AU - Caldwell, John A.
AU - Kowal, Magdalena
AU - Campbell, Mark J.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 Sleep Research Society 2021. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Sleep Research Society.
PY - 2021/7/1
Y1 - 2021/7/1
N2 - Study Objectives: To synthesize original articles exploring the effects of sleep restriction on cognitive performance specifically for Elite Cognitive Performers, i.e. those who engage in cognitively demanding tasks with critical or safety-critical outcomes in their occupation or area of expertise. Methods: Backward snowballing techniques, gray literature searches, and traditional database searches (Embase, MEDLINE, Web of Science, Google Scholar, PSYCinfo, and SportDiscus) were used to obtain relevant articles. A quality assessment was performed, and the risk of training effects was considered. Results were narratively synthesized. Fourteen articles fit the criteria. Cognitive outcomes were divided into three categories defined by whether cognitive demands were "low-salience,""high-salience stable,"or "high-salience flexible."Results: Low-salience tests (i.e. psychomotor vigilance tasks & serial reaction tests), mainly requiring vigilance and rudimentary attentional capacities, were sensitive to sleep restriction, however, this did not necessarily translate to significant performance deficits on low-salience occupation-specific task performance. High-salience cognitive outcomes were typically unaffected unless when cognitive flexibility was required. Conclusions: Sleep restriction is of particular concern to occupations whereby individuals perform (1) simple, low-salience tasks or (2) high-salience tasks with demands on the flexible allocation of attention and working memory, with critical or safety-critical outcomes.
AB - Study Objectives: To synthesize original articles exploring the effects of sleep restriction on cognitive performance specifically for Elite Cognitive Performers, i.e. those who engage in cognitively demanding tasks with critical or safety-critical outcomes in their occupation or area of expertise. Methods: Backward snowballing techniques, gray literature searches, and traditional database searches (Embase, MEDLINE, Web of Science, Google Scholar, PSYCinfo, and SportDiscus) were used to obtain relevant articles. A quality assessment was performed, and the risk of training effects was considered. Results were narratively synthesized. Fourteen articles fit the criteria. Cognitive outcomes were divided into three categories defined by whether cognitive demands were "low-salience,""high-salience stable,"or "high-salience flexible."Results: Low-salience tests (i.e. psychomotor vigilance tasks & serial reaction tests), mainly requiring vigilance and rudimentary attentional capacities, were sensitive to sleep restriction, however, this did not necessarily translate to significant performance deficits on low-salience occupation-specific task performance. High-salience cognitive outcomes were typically unaffected unless when cognitive flexibility was required. Conclusions: Sleep restriction is of particular concern to occupations whereby individuals perform (1) simple, low-salience tasks or (2) high-salience tasks with demands on the flexible allocation of attention and working memory, with critical or safety-critical outcomes.
KW - attention
KW - cognitive flexibility
KW - occupation
KW - safety-critical
KW - sleep restriction
KW - vigilance
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85107282083&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1093/sleep/zsab008
DO - 10.1093/sleep/zsab008
M3 - Review article
C2 - 33438751
AN - SCOPUS:85107282083
SN - 0161-8105
VL - 44
JO - Sleep
JF - Sleep
IS - 7
ER -