Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://doi.org/10.5665/sleep.4346
Title: Sleep deprived and sweating it out: The effects of total sleep deprivation on skin conductance reactivity to psychosocial stress
Authors: Liu, J.C.J 
Verhulst, S
Massar, S.A.A 
Chee, M.W.L 
Keywords: adrenergic system
adult
Article
cardiovascular system
clinical article
clinical effectiveness
comparative study
controlled study
electrodermal response
female
human
human experiment
male
mental stress
negative feedback
normal human
perception
skin conductance
sleep deprivation
sleep parameters
sweating
sympathetic tone
wakefulness
young adult
adolescent
feedback system
mental stress
pathophysiology
physiology
psychology
rest
risk factor
sleep
sleep deprivation
sweating
Adolescent
Adult
Feedback
Female
Galvanic Skin Response
Humans
Male
Rest
Risk Factors
Sleep
Sleep Deprivation
Stress, Psychological
Sweating
Wakefulness
Young Adult
Issue Date: 2015
Publisher: Associated Professional Sleep Societies,LLC
Citation: Liu, J.C.J, Verhulst, S, Massar, S.A.A, Chee, M.W.L (2015). Sleep deprived and sweating it out: The effects of total sleep deprivation on skin conductance reactivity to psychosocial stress. Sleep 38 (1) : 155-159. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.5665/sleep.4346
Abstract: Study Objectives: We examined how sleep deprivation alters physiological responses to psychosocial stress by evaluating changes in skin conductance.Design: Between-subjects design with one group allocated to 24 h of total sleep deprivation and the other to rested wakefulness.Setting: The study took place in a research laboratory.Participants: Participants were 40 healthy young adults recruited from a university.Interventions: Sleep deprivation and feedback.Measurements and Results: Electrodermal activity was monitored while participants completed a difficult perceptual task with false feedback. All participants showed increased skin conductance levels following stress. However, compared to well-rested participants, sleep deprived participants showed higher skin conductance reactivity with increasing stress levels.Conclusions: Our results suggest that sleep deprivation augments allostatic responses to increasing psychosocial stress. Consequentially, we propose sleep loss as a risk factor that can influence the pathogenic effects of stress.
Source Title: Sleep
URI: https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/175297
ISSN: 0161-8105
DOI: 10.5665/sleep.4346
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