The nature of on-call work is such that workers can be called and required
to respond immediately after being woken. However, due to sleep inertia,
impaired performance immediately upon waking is typical. We investigated the impact of a preceding stressor (an alarm/mobilisation procedure) on sleepiness and performance upon waking. Healthy, adult males (n = 16) attended the sleep laboratory for four consecutive nights which included two, counterbalanced on-call sleeps where participants were woken at 04:00 h by (a) an alarm/mobilisation procedure (Alarm) or (b) gently by a researcher (Control). Following waking was a 2-h testing session comprising the repeated administration of the Karolinska Sleepiness Scale (KSS) and 5-min Psychomotor Vigilance Task (PVT). Results from mixed effects analysis of variance in both the Control and Alarm conditions showed that for subjective sleepiness (KSS) there was a significant fixed effect of time (p = 0.012), with participants becoming less sleepy as time post-wake increased. In terms of PVT performance outcomes, in neither the Alarm or
Control conditions were there measurable signs of sleep inertia with
performance remaining stable across the 2-h testing period. Based on
previous research measuring impact of sleep inertia when woken near the
circadian nadir, performance findings in particular were unexpected. We propose that stress caused by study procedures (i.e. finger pricks using
lancets) unrelated to the simulated wake-up protocols may have countered any impact of sleep inertia on performance.