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O012 The Impact of Sleep Restriction on Reward learning in Healthy Adults

Sleep disruption can lead to enhanced reactivity towards pleasurable stimuli and impaired discrimination between rewarding and punishing cues. Thus, sleep may play a mechanistic role in the development and exacerbation of pathological reward-related behaviours (e.g., gambling, substance use, etc.)....

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Autores principales: Kavaliotis, E, Boardman, J, Ogeil, R, Bennett, D, Verdejo-Garcia, A, Drummond, S
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10591653/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/sleepadvances/zpad035.012
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author Kavaliotis, E
Boardman, J
Ogeil, R
Bennett, D
Verdejo-Garcia, A
Drummond, S
author_facet Kavaliotis, E
Boardman, J
Ogeil, R
Bennett, D
Verdejo-Garcia, A
Drummond, S
author_sort Kavaliotis, E
collection PubMed
description Sleep disruption can lead to enhanced reactivity towards pleasurable stimuli and impaired discrimination between rewarding and punishing cues. Thus, sleep may play a mechanistic role in the development and exacerbation of pathological reward-related behaviours (e.g., gambling, substance use, etc.). The study aimed to explore the impact of sleep restriction on reward processing. Involving a 7-night at-home sleep monitoring protocol, participants were randomly assigned an experimental condition: sleep restriction (5-hr time in bed/night; SR) or well-rested (9-hr/night; WR). Adherence to the prescribed sleep schedules was assessed daily. On the eighth day participants completed a battery of reward- learning tasks, 2-hrs post-habitual wake. Participants were healthy adults (n = 45, mean age = 25.4 yrs, 64% female). Total sleep time for the SR group (n = 18) was 297.4 mins, whilst the WR was 485.8 mins (n = 27). For the probabilistic reward task, response bias (RB) did not significantly differ between the SR and WR groups during the overall task (p = 0.28), or during blocks one (p = 0.26) or two (p = 0.90). However, at block three, the SR group showed higher RB as compared to the WR group (p = 0.03), indicating SR participants exhibited a systematic preference for the frequently rewarded cues, relative to the WR group. These preliminary results suggest initial reward responsiveness is not impacted by SR, but over time SR may produce heightened sensitivity to rewarding cues. This may indicate a role for sleep disruption in the maintenance of maladaptive appetitive behaviours.
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spelling pubmed-105916532023-10-24 O012 The Impact of Sleep Restriction on Reward learning in Healthy Adults Kavaliotis, E Boardman, J Ogeil, R Bennett, D Verdejo-Garcia, A Drummond, S Sleep Adv Oral Presentations Sleep disruption can lead to enhanced reactivity towards pleasurable stimuli and impaired discrimination between rewarding and punishing cues. Thus, sleep may play a mechanistic role in the development and exacerbation of pathological reward-related behaviours (e.g., gambling, substance use, etc.). The study aimed to explore the impact of sleep restriction on reward processing. Involving a 7-night at-home sleep monitoring protocol, participants were randomly assigned an experimental condition: sleep restriction (5-hr time in bed/night; SR) or well-rested (9-hr/night; WR). Adherence to the prescribed sleep schedules was assessed daily. On the eighth day participants completed a battery of reward- learning tasks, 2-hrs post-habitual wake. Participants were healthy adults (n = 45, mean age = 25.4 yrs, 64% female). Total sleep time for the SR group (n = 18) was 297.4 mins, whilst the WR was 485.8 mins (n = 27). For the probabilistic reward task, response bias (RB) did not significantly differ between the SR and WR groups during the overall task (p = 0.28), or during blocks one (p = 0.26) or two (p = 0.90). However, at block three, the SR group showed higher RB as compared to the WR group (p = 0.03), indicating SR participants exhibited a systematic preference for the frequently rewarded cues, relative to the WR group. These preliminary results suggest initial reward responsiveness is not impacted by SR, but over time SR may produce heightened sensitivity to rewarding cues. This may indicate a role for sleep disruption in the maintenance of maladaptive appetitive behaviours. Oxford University Press 2023-10-23 /pmc/articles/PMC10591653/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/sleepadvances/zpad035.012 Text en © The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Sleep Research Society. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/), which permits non-commercial reproduction and distribution of the work, in any medium, provided the original work is not altered or transformed in any way, and that the work properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Oral Presentations
Kavaliotis, E
Boardman, J
Ogeil, R
Bennett, D
Verdejo-Garcia, A
Drummond, S
O012 The Impact of Sleep Restriction on Reward learning in Healthy Adults
title O012 The Impact of Sleep Restriction on Reward learning in Healthy Adults
title_full O012 The Impact of Sleep Restriction on Reward learning in Healthy Adults
title_fullStr O012 The Impact of Sleep Restriction on Reward learning in Healthy Adults
title_full_unstemmed O012 The Impact of Sleep Restriction on Reward learning in Healthy Adults
title_short O012 The Impact of Sleep Restriction on Reward learning in Healthy Adults
title_sort o012 the impact of sleep restriction on reward learning in healthy adults
topic Oral Presentations
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10591653/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/sleepadvances/zpad035.012
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