The effects of sleep deprivation on information-integration categorization performance

Sleep. 2009 Nov;32(11):1439-48. doi: 10.1093/sleep/32.11.1439.

Abstract

Background: Sleep deprivation is a serious problem facing individuals in many critical societal roles. One of the most ubiquitous tasks facing individuals is categorization. Sleep deprivation is known to affect rule-based categorization in the classic Wisconsin Card Sorting Task, but, to date, information-integration categorization has not been examined.

Study objectives: To investigate the effects of sleep deprivation on information-integration category learning.

Design: Participants performed an information-integration categorization task twice, separated by a 24-hour period, with or without sleep between testing sessions.

Participants: Twenty-one West Point cadets participated in the sleep-deprivation group and 28 West Point cadets participated in a control group.

Measurements and results: Sleep deprivation led to an overall performance deficit during the second testing session-that is, whereas participants allowed to sleep showed a significant performance increase during the second testing session, sleepless participants showed a small (but nonsignificant) performance decline during the second testing session. Model-based analyses indicated that a major contributor to the sleep-deprivation effect was the poor second-session performance of a subgroup of sleep-deprived participants who shifted from optimal information-integration strategies at the end of the first session to less-optimal rule-based strategies at the start of the second session. Sleep-deprived participants who used information-integration strategies in both sessions showed no drop in performance in the second session, mirroring the behavior of control participants.

Conclusions: The findings suggest that the neural systems underlying information-integration strategies are not strongly affected by sleep deprivation but, rather, that the use of an information-integration strategy in a task may require active inhibition of rule-based strategies, with this inhibitory process being vulnerable to the effects of sleep deprivation.

Publication types

  • Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • Association*
  • Attention / physiology
  • Case-Control Studies
  • Cohort Studies
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Pattern Recognition, Visual / physiology
  • Psychological Tests
  • Retention, Psychology / physiology
  • Sleep Deprivation / complications
  • Sleep Deprivation / psychology*
  • Thinking / physiology*
  • Young Adult