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題名 Information processing during sleep and stress-related sleep vulnerability
作者 Lin, Yen-Hsuan ; Jen,Chun-Hui ; Yang, Chien-Ming
楊建銘
貢獻者 心理學系
關鍵詞 event-related potential;information processing;insomnia;stress-related sleep vulnerability
日期 2015-02
上傳時間 9-Apr-2015 16:43:25 (UTC+8)
摘要 Aims
     
     
     Previous studies showed enhanced attention and decreased inhibitory processes during early non-rapid eye movement sleep in primary insomnia patients, as measured by event-related potentials. The current study aims to examine information processing during sleep in non-insomniac individuals with high vulnerability (HV) to stress-related sleep disturbances.
     
     
     Methods
     
     
     Twenty-seven non-insomniac individuals were recruited, 14 with low vulnerability and 13 with HV. After passing a screening interview and polysomnographic recording, subjects came to the sleep laboratory for 2 nights (a baseline night and a stress-inducing night) for event-related potentials recordings.
     
     
     Results
     
     
     The HV group demonstrated shorter P2 latency during the first 5 min of stage 2 sleep and higher P900 amplitudes under the stress condition during slow-wave sleep, which indicates an increased level of inhibitory processes. In addition, they had shorter N1 latencies during slow-wave sleep that could indicate an elevated level of attention processing during deep sleep.
     
     
     Conclusions
     
     
     Unlike patients with chronic insomnia, individuals with high sleep vulnerability to stress show a compensatory process that may prevent external stimulation from interfering with their sleep. This may be one of the factors preventing their acute sleep disturbances from becoming chronic problems.
關聯 Psychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences,69(2),84-92
10.1111/pcn.12206
資料類型 article
dc.contributor 心理學系-
dc.creator (作者) Lin, Yen-Hsuan ; Jen,Chun-Hui ; Yang, Chien-Ming-
dc.creator (作者) 楊建銘-
dc.date (日期) 2015-02-
dc.date.accessioned 9-Apr-2015 16:43:25 (UTC+8)-
dc.date.available 9-Apr-2015 16:43:25 (UTC+8)-
dc.date.issued (上傳時間) 9-Apr-2015 16:43:25 (UTC+8)-
dc.identifier.uri (URI) http://nccur.lib.nccu.edu.tw/handle/140.119/74422-
dc.description.abstract (摘要) Aims
     
     
     Previous studies showed enhanced attention and decreased inhibitory processes during early non-rapid eye movement sleep in primary insomnia patients, as measured by event-related potentials. The current study aims to examine information processing during sleep in non-insomniac individuals with high vulnerability (HV) to stress-related sleep disturbances.
     
     
     Methods
     
     
     Twenty-seven non-insomniac individuals were recruited, 14 with low vulnerability and 13 with HV. After passing a screening interview and polysomnographic recording, subjects came to the sleep laboratory for 2 nights (a baseline night and a stress-inducing night) for event-related potentials recordings.
     
     
     Results
     
     
     The HV group demonstrated shorter P2 latency during the first 5 min of stage 2 sleep and higher P900 amplitudes under the stress condition during slow-wave sleep, which indicates an increased level of inhibitory processes. In addition, they had shorter N1 latencies during slow-wave sleep that could indicate an elevated level of attention processing during deep sleep.
     
     
     Conclusions
     
     
     Unlike patients with chronic insomnia, individuals with high sleep vulnerability to stress show a compensatory process that may prevent external stimulation from interfering with their sleep. This may be one of the factors preventing their acute sleep disturbances from becoming chronic problems.
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dc.format.extent 184210 bytes-
dc.format.mimetype application/pdf-
dc.relation (關聯) Psychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences,69(2),84-92-
dc.relation (關聯) 10.1111/pcn.12206-
dc.subject (關鍵詞) event-related potential;information processing;insomnia;stress-related sleep vulnerability-
dc.title (題名) Information processing during sleep and stress-related sleep vulnerability-
dc.type (資料類型) articleen