Title: Message
 
http://www.dawn.com/2002/06/04/int8.htm

Dawn (Pakistan), June 4, 2002

International:

Sleeping at work a good thing: experts


                
LONDON, June 3: Sleeping on the job should possibly be regarded as good conduct
                 rather than slacking, according to a new study conducted in the United States.

                 The research shows that napping for 30 minutes or an hour during the day maintains
                 mental performance when the brain is overloaded. Without a "powernap" too much
                 information flooding the brain of a busy employee can "fry" the neurons and lead to
                 a loss of learning ability.

                 Daytime naps lasting an hour or less had previously been shown to improve
                 alertness, productivity and mood, especially under sleep- deprived conditions such as
                 those experienced by night-shift workers. But it was not clear what effect napping
                 had on the brain and whether it had an impact on learning.

                 US scientists at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts, asked 129
                 undergraduate students to carry out a series of visual discrimination tasks, in which
                 letters and shapes on a screen had to be rapidly identified. Each test lasted about an
                 hour and they were repeated four times a day in order deliberately to put the
                 students under pressure.

                 With each successive session, volunteers needed increasingly longer learning times"
                 to reliably identify targets. But when students were allowed to nap between sessions
                 the fall in performance was cancelled out or even reversed. A short nap between the
                 second and third test sessions prevented the further deterioration normally seen in
                 sessions three and four.

                 An hour-long nap at the same time reversed the deterioration seen in the second
                 session.

                 The scientists, who reported their findings in the journal Nature Neuroscience, found
                 that deep, slow-wave sleep (SWS) was important for enhancing performance.

                 Different versions of the experiment indicated that sleep, and not merely resting with
                 the eyes closed, was necessary to produce the restorative effect. The researchers
                 noted that powernaps were common among people experiencing daily information
                 overload.

                 Students switched to a different visual input affecting a different part of the brain for
                 the final test session showed a marked recovery in performance.

                 If general tiredness had been to blame, their performance would have been expected
                 to continue deteriorating. The scientists, led by Sara Mednick, wrote: "It suggests
                 that the psychological sensation of burnout', described anecdotally as increased
                 irritation and frustration along with decreased effectiveness after prolonged cognitive
                 effort, may not reflect a general mental fatigue, but rather the specific need of an
                 overused local neural network to enjoy the restorative benefits of sleep."-dpa
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