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Sleep-wake behaviors exhibited by shift workers in normal operations and predicted by a biomathematical model of fatigue

journal contribution
posted on 2021-03-29, 00:23 authored by Samantha M Riedy, Gregory RoachGregory Roach, Drew DawsonDrew Dawson
STUDY OBJECTIVES: To compare rail workers' actual sleep-wake behaviors in normal operations to those predicted by a biomathematical model of fatigue (BMMF). To determine whether there are group-level residual sources of error in sleep predictions that could be modeled to improve group-level sleep predictions. METHODS: The sleep-wake behaviors of 354 rail workers were examined during 1,722 breaks that were 8-24 h in duration. Sleep-wake patterns were continuously monitored using wrist-actigraphy and predicted from the work-rest schedule using a BMMF. Rail workers' actual and predicted sleep-wake behaviors were defined as split-sleep (i.e. ≥2 sleep periods in a break) and consolidated-sleep (i.e. one sleep period in a break) behaviors. Sleepiness was predicted from the actual and predicted sleep-wake data. RESULTS: Consolidated-sleep behaviors were observed during 1,441 breaks and correctly predicted during 1,359 breaks. Split-sleep behaviors were observed during 280 breaks and correctly predicted during 182 breaks. Predicting the wrong type of sleep-wake behavior resulted in a misestimation of hours of sleep during a break. Relative to sleepiness predictions derived from actual sleep-wake data, predicting the wrong type of sleep-wake behavior resulted in a misestimation of sleepiness predictions during the subsequent shift. CONCLUSIONS: All workers with the same work-rest schedule have the same predicted sleep-wake behaviors; however, these workers do not all exhibit the same sleep-wake behaviors in real-world operations. Future models could account for this group-level residual variance with a new approach to modeling sleep, whereby sub-group(s) may be predicted to exhibit one of a number of sleep-wake behaviors.

Funding

Category 1 - Australian Competitive Grants (this includes ARC, NHMRC)

History

Volume

43

Issue

9

Start Page

1

End Page

14

Number of Pages

14

eISSN

1550-9109

ISSN

0161-8105

Location

United States

Publisher

Oxford University Press

Language

eng

Peer Reviewed

  • Yes

Open Access

  • No

Acceptance Date

2020-02-24

External Author Affiliations

Washington State University, USA

Author Research Institute

  • Appleton Institute

Era Eligible

  • Yes

Medium

Print

Journal

Sleep

Article Number

ARTN zsaa049

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