
@article{ref1,
title="Effects of bright light and an afternoon nap on task performance depend on the  cognitive domain",
journal="Journal of sleep research",
year="2020",
author="Qian, Liu and Ru, Taotao and Chen, Qingwei and Li, Yun and Zhou, Ying and Zhou, Guofu",
volume="ePub",
number="ePub",
pages="ePub-ePub",
abstract="Previous research revealed inconsistent effects of bright light or a short nap at  noon on alertness and performance across different tasks. The current study aimed to  explore whether the effects of bright light and a short nap at noon on task  performance depended on the cognitive domain. Bright light (1,200 lx, 4,000 K at eye  level), nap (near darkness) and control (200 lx, 4,000 K at eye level) conditions  were performed from 1:00 to 1:40 PM on three non-consecutive days with a  counterbalanced order across participants. After being assigned to one of three  conditions, participants underwent two repeated test sessions, each including a  psychomotor vigilance task, a go/no-go task, and a paced visual serial addition  task, with an interval of more than 1 h, to assess the persistent effects of napping  and bright light. Subjective sleepiness, vitality, self-control and mood were also  measured. <br><br>RESULTS showed that accuracy on the go/no-go task and the paced visual  serial addition task improved significantly throughout the entire experiment session  after napping, whereas reaction speed on the paced visual serial addition task  improved time-dependently in the bright light intervention, with a higher reaction  speed in only the first test session. Nearly all subjective states benefited from  napping but not from bright light. These findings suggested that the effects of  bright light and an afternoon nap on task performance would depend on the cognitive  domain. An afternoon nap may elicit more effective and persistent benefits on task  performance and subjective states.<p /> <p>Language: en</p>",
language="en",
issn="0962-1105",
doi="10.1111/jsr.13242",
url="http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jsr.13242"
}