首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
We all know that we don’t get enough sleep. But how much sleep do we really need? Until about 15 years ago, one common theory wa
We all know that we don’t get enough sleep. But how much sleep do we really need? Until about 15 years ago, one common theory wa
admin
2015-10-21
41
问题
We all know that we don’t get enough sleep. But how much sleep do we really need? Until about 15 years ago, one common theory was that if you slept at least four or five hours a night, your cognitive performance remained intact; your body simply adapted to less sleep. But that idea was based on studies in which researchers sent sleepy subjects home during the day—where they may have sneaked in naps and downed coffee.
Enter David Dinges, the head of the Sleep and Chronobiology Laboratory at the Hospital at University of Pennsylvania, who has the distinction of depriving more people of sleep than perhaps anyone in the world. In what was the longest sleep-restriction study of its kind, Dinges and his lead author, Hans Van Dongen, assigned dozens of subjects to three different groups for their 2003 study: some slept four hours, others six hours and others, for the lucky control group, eight hours— for two weeks in the lab. Every two hours during the day, the researchers tested the subjects’ ability to sustain attention with what’s known as the psychomotor vigilance task, or P. V. T. , considered a gold standard of sleepiness measures. During the P. V. T. , the men and women sat in front of computer screens for 10-minute periods, pressing the space bar as soon as they saw a flash of numbers at random intervals. Even a half-second response delay suggests a lapse into sleepiness, known as a microsleep.
The P. V. T. is tedious but simple if you’ve been sleeping well. It measures the sustained attention that is vital for pilots, truck drivers, astronauts. Attention is also key for focusing during long meetings; for reading a paragraph just once, instead of five times; for driving a car. It takes the equivalent of only a two-second lapse for a driver to veer into oncoming traffic.
Not surprisingly, those who had eight hours of sleep hardly had any attention lapses and no cognitive declines over the 14 days of the study. What was interesting was that those in the four-and six-hour groups had P. V. T. results that declined steadily with almost each passing day. Though the four-hour subjects performed far worse, the six-hour group also consistently fell off-task. By the sixth day, 25 percent of the six-hour group was falling asleep at the computer. And at the end of the study, they were lapsing fives times as much as they did the first day. The six-hour subjects fared no better—steadily declining over the two weeks—on a test of working memory in which they had to remember numbers and symbols and substitute one for the other. The same was true for an addition-subtraction task that measures speed and accuracy. All told, by the end of two weeks, the six-hour sleepers were as impaired as those who, in another Dinges study, had been sleep-deprived for 24 hours straight—the cognitive equivalent of being legally drunk.
So, for most of us, eight hours of sleep is excellent and six hours is no good, but what about if we split the difference? What is the threshold below which cognitive function begins to flag? While Dinges’s study was under way, his colleague Gregory Belenky, then director of the division of neuroscience at the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research in Silver Spring, Md. , was running a similar study. He purposely restricted his subjects to odd numbers of sleep hours—three, five, seven and nine hours—so that together the studies would offer a fuller picture of sleep-restriction. Belenky’s nine-hour subjects performed much like Dinges’s eight-hour ones. But in the seven-hour group, their response time on the P. V. T. slowed and continued to do so for three days, before stabilizing at lower levels than when they started. Americans average 6. 9 hours on weeknights, according to the National Sleep Foundation. Which means that, whether we like it or not, we are not thinking as clearly as we could be.
Of course our lives are more stimulating than a sleep lab: we have coffee, bright lights, the social buzz of the office,all of which work as "countermeasures" to sleepiness. They can do the job for only so long, however. As Belenky, who now heads up the Sleep and Performance Research Center at Washington State University, Spokane, where Van Dongen is also a professor, told me about cognitive deficits:"You don’t see it the first day. But you do in five to seven days. "
And it’s not clear that we can rely on weekends to make up for sleep deprivation. Dinges is now running a long-term sleep restriction and recovery study to see how many nights we need to erase our sleep debt. But past studies suggest that, at least in many cases, one night alone won’t do it.
Which of the following statements is NOT true about P. V. T. ?
选项
A、It is a standard of sleepiness measures.
B、It is an easy but thought-provoking test.
C、It can tell a lapse into sleepiness.
D、It can measure the sustained attention.
答案
B
解析
推断题。根据题干关键词P.V.T.定位到第三、四段。第四段第一句提到,用P.V.T.法检测睡眠虽单调乏味但却简单有效,故[B]与原文意思不符,是正确答案。[A]“它是衡量睡眠充足程度的标准”与第三段第一句意思相符,故排除;[C]“它能辨明是否进入睡眠状态”与第三段第三句意思一致,故排除;[D]“它能够衡量注意力的持续”与第四段第二句意思一致,故排除。
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/pXKO777K
0
专业英语八级
相关试题推荐
Extraordinarycreativeactivityhasbeencharacterizedasrevolutionary,flyinginthefaceofwhatisestablishedandproducing
Evenasthenumberoffemalesprocessedthroughjuvenilecourtsclimbssteadily,animplicitconsensusremainsamongscholarsi
WhichofthefollowingaboutAmy’sbackgroundisINCORRECT?
AllofthefollowingstatementsaretrueaboutthosechildreninvolvedinpoliticalviolenceEXCEPT
The1920sbroughtthefollowingtoAmericansEXCEPT
ThecityofLondonis【N1】______foraseriesofeventstocelebratetheChineseNewYear,andiflastyear’scelebrationsarean
AccordingtoUSGBC,buildingstakeup______ofcarbonemissionsintheU.S.
HowtoStudyEnglishinYourDream:theTheoryI.IntroductionA.ConnectionsamongEnglishstudy,imaginationanddreamB.Two
CultureShockI.Thedefinitionofcultureshock—feelingslikesurprise,disorientation,uncertaintyand(1)______(1)______
LosAngelescabinet-makerEdwardStewartmaybeamodernDr.Frankenstein.In1959,heclaims,herestoredadeadfriendtolife
随机试题
属于顺规散光的是
患者,女性,55岁,白带多,接触性出血3月余,3年前曾因宫颈糜烂行宫颈冷冻治疗。妇科检查:外阴阴道未见异常,宫颈肥大糜烂、质脆,子宫及双附件未见异常。检查结果证实为宫颈上皮内瘤样病变,异型细胞占宫颈上皮全层2/3以上,伴HPV感染,此例应诊断为
案情:甲公司从某银行贷款1200万元,以自有房产设定抵押,并办理了抵押登记。经书面协议,乙公司以其价值200万元的现有的以及将有的生产设备、原材料、半成品、产品为甲公司的贷款设定抵押,没有办理抵押登记。后甲公司届期无力清偿贷款,某银行欲行使抵押权。法院拟拍
建筑工程的发包单位可以将下面建筑工程的_________一并发包给一个工程总承包单位。()
工作电源与应急电源之间,要采用自动切换方式,同时按照负载容量由大到小的原则顺序启动。电动机类负载启动间隔宜在()之间。
会计核算中产生权责发生制和收付实现制两种记账基础的前提是()。
皇佑二年,吴中大饥,殍殣枕路,是时范文正领浙西,发粟及募民存饷,为术甚备,吴人喜竞渡,好为佛事。希文乃纵民竞渡,太守日出宴于湖上,自春至夏,居民空巷出游。又召诸佛寺主首,谕之曰:“饥岁工价至贱,可以大兴土木之役。”于是诸寺工作鼎兴。又新敖仓吏舍,日役千夫。
技能
使用CIDR技术把4个网络202.17.0.0/21、202.17.16.0/20、202.17.8.0/22和202.17.34.0/23汇聚成一条路由信息,得到的目标地址是______。
Inshoppingmalls,theassistantstrytopushyouintobuying"agifttothankherforherunselfishlove".Whenyoulogontoa
最新回复
(
0
)