Abstract

Sleep loss is reported to influence affective processing, causing changes in overall mood and altering emotion regulation. These aspects of affective processing are seldom investigated together, making it difficult to determine whether total sleep deprivation has a global effect on how affective stimuli and emotions are processed, or whether specific components of affective processing are affected selectively. Sixty healthy adults were recruited for an in-laboratory study and, after a monitored night of sleep and laboratory acclimation, randomly assigned to either a total sleep deprivation condition (n = 40) or a rested control condition (n = 20). Measurements of mood, vigilant attention to affective stimuli, affective working memory, affective categorization, and emotion regulation were taken for both groups. With one exception, measures of interest were administered twice: once at baseline and again 24 hours later, after the sleep deprived group had spent a night awake (working memory was assessed only after total sleep deprivation). Sleep deprived individuals experienced an overall reduction in positive affect with no significant change in negative affect. Despite the substantial decline in positive affect, there was no evidence that processing affectively valenced information was biased under total sleep deprivation. Sleep deprived subjects did not rate affective stimuli differently from rested subjects, nor did they show sleep deprivation-specific effects of affect type on vigilant attention, working memory, and categorization tasks. However, sleep deprived subjects showed less effective regulation of negative emotion. Overall, we found no evidence that total sleep deprivation biased the processing of affective stimuli in general. By contrast, total sleep deprivation appeared to reduce controlled processing required for emotion regulation.

Highlights

  • Sleep loss is associated with a range of neurobiological and behavioral impairments that are commonly presented as reduced alertness, altered mood, and degraded task performance

  • There was a significant interaction of condition by test bout for negative affect, F(7, 413) = 2.08, p = 0.044 (Fig 2). This interaction was driven by a difference during the first bout during the experimental day (25 h awake), where total sleep deprivation (TSD) subjects experienced a small but significant increase in negative affect, t(187) = 2.18, p = 0.030

  • We explored three questions related to TSD and affect: (1) whether TSD biases the processing of affective stimuli when maintaining vigilant attention, updating working memory, or categorizing affective stimuli; (2) whether emotion regulation is impaired by TSD; and (3) whether changes in mood account for TSD effects on affective processing

Read more

Summary

Objectives

The novel purpose of this study was to answer three questions: (1) Is TSD biasing the processing of affective information when maintaining vigilant attention, updating working memory, or categorizing affective stimuli; (2) Is the ability to regulate emotion impaired under TSD; and (3) Are TSD effects on these different forms of affective processing dissociable from effects due to an overall change in mood? If TSD has a global biasing effect on affective processing, either as a result of or separately from TSD-induced mood changes, we should see valence-specific effects of TSD across our test battery

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call