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Journal Article

Citation

Monk TH, Fookson JE, Moline ML, Pollak CP. Chronobiol. Int. 1985; 2(3): 185-193.

Affiliation

Department of Psychiatry, Cornell University Medical College, NY.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1985, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

3870849

Abstract

In order to document circadian rhythmicity in various psychological functions under the chronobiologically 'pure' condition of temporal isolation, a battery of mood and performance tests were administered about 6 times per day to a heterogeneous group of 18 subjects (ages 19-81, 5 female). Each subject spent about 5 days in temporal isolation, entrained to a routine equivalent to his/her own habitual sleep/wake cycle. Average time of day functions were obtained for the mood and performance variables, and compared to rectal temperature data subjected to exactly the same statistical analysis. Significant time of day effects were found in the mood variables of alertness, sleepiness, weariness, effort required, happiness and well-being. Times of 'best' mood were different from the time of peak temperature. Moreover, the minima of sleepiness, weariness and effort occurred earlier in the day than the maximum of alertness. Significant time of day effects were also found in the speed with which search and dexterity tasks were completed. Only the dexterity tasks showed a complete parallelism with the temperature rhythm.


Language: en

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