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Synchronized drowsiness monitoring and simulated driving performance data under 50-hr sleep deprivation: A double-blind placebo-controlled caffeine intervention

This paper presents the 60-s time-resolution segment from our 50-h total sleep deprivation (TSD) dataset (Aidman et al., 2018) [1] that captures minute-by-minute dynamics of driving performance (lane keeping and speed variability) along with objective, oculography-derived drowsiness estimates synchr...

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Autores principales: Aidman, E., Johnson, K., Hoggan, B.L., Fidock, J., Paech, G.M., Della Vedova, C.B., Pajcin, M., Grant, C., Kamimori, G., Mitchelson, E., Banks, S.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6141128/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30229009
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.dib.2018.06.006
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author Aidman, E.
Johnson, K.
Hoggan, B.L.
Fidock, J.
Paech, G.M.
Della Vedova, C.B.
Pajcin, M.
Grant, C.
Kamimori, G.
Mitchelson, E.
Banks, S.
author_facet Aidman, E.
Johnson, K.
Hoggan, B.L.
Fidock, J.
Paech, G.M.
Della Vedova, C.B.
Pajcin, M.
Grant, C.
Kamimori, G.
Mitchelson, E.
Banks, S.
author_sort Aidman, E.
collection PubMed
description This paper presents the 60-s time-resolution segment from our 50-h total sleep deprivation (TSD) dataset (Aidman et al., 2018) [1] that captures minute-by-minute dynamics of driving performance (lane keeping and speed variability) along with objective, oculography-derived drowsiness estimates synchronised to the same 1-min driving epochs. Eleven participants (5 females, aged 18–28) were randomised into caffeine (administered in four 200 mg doses via chewing gum in the early morning hours) or placebo groups. Every three hours they performed a 40 min simulated drive in a medium fidelity driving simulator, while their drowsiness was continuously measured with a spectacle frame-mounted infra-red alertness monitoring system. The dataset covers 15 driving periods of 40 min each, and thus contains over 600 data points of paired data per participant. The 1-min time resolution enables detailed time-series analyses of both time-since-wake and time-on-task performance dynamics and associated drowsiness levels. It also enables direct examination of the relationships between drowsiness and task performance measures. The question of how these relationships might change under various intervention conditions (caffeine in our case) seems worth further investigation.
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spelling pubmed-61411282018-09-18 Synchronized drowsiness monitoring and simulated driving performance data under 50-hr sleep deprivation: A double-blind placebo-controlled caffeine intervention Aidman, E. Johnson, K. Hoggan, B.L. Fidock, J. Paech, G.M. Della Vedova, C.B. Pajcin, M. Grant, C. Kamimori, G. Mitchelson, E. Banks, S. Data Brief Social Science This paper presents the 60-s time-resolution segment from our 50-h total sleep deprivation (TSD) dataset (Aidman et al., 2018) [1] that captures minute-by-minute dynamics of driving performance (lane keeping and speed variability) along with objective, oculography-derived drowsiness estimates synchronised to the same 1-min driving epochs. Eleven participants (5 females, aged 18–28) were randomised into caffeine (administered in four 200 mg doses via chewing gum in the early morning hours) or placebo groups. Every three hours they performed a 40 min simulated drive in a medium fidelity driving simulator, while their drowsiness was continuously measured with a spectacle frame-mounted infra-red alertness monitoring system. The dataset covers 15 driving periods of 40 min each, and thus contains over 600 data points of paired data per participant. The 1-min time resolution enables detailed time-series analyses of both time-since-wake and time-on-task performance dynamics and associated drowsiness levels. It also enables direct examination of the relationships between drowsiness and task performance measures. The question of how these relationships might change under various intervention conditions (caffeine in our case) seems worth further investigation. Elsevier 2018-06-09 /pmc/articles/PMC6141128/ /pubmed/30229009 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.dib.2018.06.006 Text en © 2018 The Authors http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Social Science
Aidman, E.
Johnson, K.
Hoggan, B.L.
Fidock, J.
Paech, G.M.
Della Vedova, C.B.
Pajcin, M.
Grant, C.
Kamimori, G.
Mitchelson, E.
Banks, S.
Synchronized drowsiness monitoring and simulated driving performance data under 50-hr sleep deprivation: A double-blind placebo-controlled caffeine intervention
title Synchronized drowsiness monitoring and simulated driving performance data under 50-hr sleep deprivation: A double-blind placebo-controlled caffeine intervention
title_full Synchronized drowsiness monitoring and simulated driving performance data under 50-hr sleep deprivation: A double-blind placebo-controlled caffeine intervention
title_fullStr Synchronized drowsiness monitoring and simulated driving performance data under 50-hr sleep deprivation: A double-blind placebo-controlled caffeine intervention
title_full_unstemmed Synchronized drowsiness monitoring and simulated driving performance data under 50-hr sleep deprivation: A double-blind placebo-controlled caffeine intervention
title_short Synchronized drowsiness monitoring and simulated driving performance data under 50-hr sleep deprivation: A double-blind placebo-controlled caffeine intervention
title_sort synchronized drowsiness monitoring and simulated driving performance data under 50-hr sleep deprivation: a double-blind placebo-controlled caffeine intervention
topic Social Science
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6141128/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30229009
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.dib.2018.06.006
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