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Testing the Rip Van Winkle Effect: Sleep Extension following Nominal and Restricted Sleep Cover

Testing the Rip Van Winkle Effect: Sleep Extension following Nominal and Restricted Sleep

By: CJ Hilditch,  WC Dement and  MA Carskadon  
Open Access
|Sep 2022

Abstract

The negative effects of sleep loss on sleepiness, performance, and mood have been well-documented. Less is known, however, about possible negative effects of sleep extension and findings are inconsistent. This study investigated the Rip Van Winkle effect, comparing the effects of a single night of sleep extension (11 h time-in-bed, TIB) to control sleep (8.5 h TIB) following three nights on a nominal (8.5 h TIB) or restricted (6.5 h TIB) sleep schedule. Nine healthy males (mean age 21 y; mean habitual sleep 7.9 h) participated in a four-way cross-over design. Participants completed sleepiness and mood scales, a range of performance tasks, and multiple sleep latency tests approximately every two hours following in-laboratory baseline and experimental nights. Objective sleepiness was reduced (i.e., sleep onset latency was delayed) following sleep extension under both nominal and restricted baseline conditions. Self-reported mood was modestly improved following sleep extension. No changes in subjective sleepiness or objectively measured performance were observed across conditions. The results indicate that one night of sleep extension, following either nominal or restricted sleep, can reduce objective sleepiness but does not appear to consistently alter performance or subjective sleepiness.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.21307/esw-2020-001 | Journal eISSN: 2206-5369 | Journal ISSN: 2205-0612
Language: English
Page range: 3 - 17
Published on: Sep 1, 2022
Published by: University of South Australia
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 1 issue per year

© 2022 CJ Hilditch, WC Dement, MA Carskadon, published by University of South Australia
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 License.