4.2 Article

Effects of sleep deprivation on lateral visual attention

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 116, Issue 10, Pages 1125-1138

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/00207450500513922

Keywords

attention; cognition; laterality; right-hemisphere; sleep deprivation; vigilance; visual field; visual perception

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Sleep loss temporarily impairs vigilance and sustained attention. Because these cognitive abilities are believed to be mediated predominantly by the right cerebral hemisphere, this article hypothesized that continuous sleep deprivation results in a greater frequency of inattention errors within the left versus right visual fields. Twenty-one participants were assessed several times each day during a 40-h period of sustained wakefulness and following a night of recovery sleep. At each assessment, participants engaged in a continuous serial addition task while simultaneously monitoring a 150 degrees visual field for brief intermittent flashes of light. Overall, omission errors were most common in the leftmost peripheral field for all sessions, and did not show any evidence of a shift in laterality as a function of sleep deprivation. Relative to rested baseline and postrecovery conditions, sleep deprivation resulted in a global increase in omission errors across all visual locations and a general decline in serial addition performance. These findings argue against the hypothesis that sleep deprivation produces lateralized deficits in attention and suggest instead that deficits in visual attention produced by sleep deprivation are global and bilateral in nature.

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