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Sleep
Deprivation negatively affects Split-Second
Decision Making
Newswise — Sleep deprivation adversely
affects automatic, accurate responses and
can lead to potentially devastating errors,
a finding of particular concern among
firefighters, police officers, soldiers and
others who work in a sleep-deprived state,
University of Texas at Austin researchers
say.
Psychology professors Todd Maddox and David
Schnyer found moderate sleep deprivation
causes some people to shift from a faster
and more accurate process of information
categorization (information-integration) to
a more controlled, explicit process
(rule-based), resulting in negative effects
on performance.
The researchers examined sleep deprivation
effects on information-integration, a
cognitive operation that relies heavily on
implicit split-second, gut-feeling
decisions.
“It’s important to understand this domain of
procedural learning because
information-integration – the fast and
accurate strategy – is critical in
situations when solders need to make
split-second decisions about whether a
potential target is an enemy soldier, a
civilian or one of their own,” Maddox said.
The study examined information-integration
tasks performed by 49 cadets at the United
States Military Academy at West Point over
the course of two days. The participants
performed the task twice, separated by a
24-hour period, with or without sleep
between sessions. Twenty-one cadets were
placed in a sleep deprivation group and 28
well-rested participants were designated as
controls. It revealed that moderate sleep
deprivation can lead to an overall immediate
short-term loss of information-integration
thought processes.
Performance improved in the control group by
4.3 percent from the end of day one to the
beginning of day two (accuracy increased
from 74 percent to 78.3 percent);
performance in the sleep-deprived group
declined by 2.4 percent (accuracy decreased
from 73.1 percent to 70.7 percent) from the
end of day one to the beginning of day two.
This decline was much larger for those
participants who shifted from an
information-integration to a rule-based
approach.
According to the findings, people who rely
more on rule-based (over-thinking)
strategies are more vulnerable to the ill
effects of sleep deprivation. This is the
first study that has explored this domain of
procedural learning, Schnyer said.
Maddox and Schnyer were surprised to find
the adverse effects of sleep deprivation on
information processing varied among
individuals. Schnyer believes this finding
has implications for training purposes for
high-pressure, life-and-death jobs,
particularly the Army.
The study, published in the November issue
of Sleep, was funded by the U.S. Army and
through the Center for Strategic and
Innovative Technologies at The University of
Texas at Austin.
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