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Journal Article

Citation

Umemura GS, Pinho JP, Duysens J, Krebs HI, Forner-Cordero A. Sci. Rep. 2021; 11(1): e21104.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2021, Nature Publishing Group)

DOI

10.1038/s41598-021-00705-9

PMID

34702960

PMCID

PMC8548553

Abstract

Different levels of sleep restriction affect human performance in multiple aspects. However, it is unclear how sleep deprivation affects gait control. We applied a paced gait paradigm that included subliminal rhythm changes to analyze the effects of different sleep restriction levels (acute, chronic and control) on performance. Acute sleep deprivation (one night) group exhibited impaired performance in the sensorimotor synchronization gait protocol, such as a decrease in the Period Error between the footfalls and the auditory stimulus as well as missing more frequently the auditory cues. The group with chronic sleep restriction also underperformed when compared to the control group with a tendency to a late footfall with respect to the RAC sound. Our results suggest that partial or total sleep deprivation leads to a decrease in the performance in the sensorimotor control of gait. The superior performance of the chronic sleep group when compared to the acute group suggests that there is a compensatory mechanism that helps to improve motor performance.


Language: en

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