Decisional style, sleepiness, and online responsiveness

As sleep problems can impair quality of work, an online questionnaire was used to examine relationships between sleepiness and decision making while obtaining unobtrusive indices of performance. Participants (N = 344) completed the Insomnia Severity Index, Epworth Sleepiness Scale, and the Melbourne...

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Veröffentlicht in:Ergonomics 2024-09, Vol.67 (9), p.1177-1189
Hauptverfasser: Phillips, James G., Chow, Yang-Wai, Ogeil, Rowan P.
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container_end_page 1189
container_issue 9
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container_title Ergonomics
container_volume 67
creator Phillips, James G.
Chow, Yang-Wai
Ogeil, Rowan P.
description As sleep problems can impair quality of work, an online questionnaire was used to examine relationships between sleepiness and decision making while obtaining unobtrusive indices of performance. Participants (N = 344) completed the Insomnia Severity Index, Epworth Sleepiness Scale, and the Melbourne Decision Making Questionnaire in a Qualtrics survey while reporting mobile phone use. Qualtrics recorded the time and the number of clicks required to complete each page of the survey. Multiple regression indicated that insomnia was associated with daytime sleepiness and Hypervigilance, and mobile phone use before bed. Participants with moderate sleepiness required a greater number of clicks to complete the questionnaire. Greater sleepiness was associated with longer times to complete these self-assessment tasks. Clinically significant sleepiness produces changes in performance that can be detected from online responsivity. As sleepy individuals can be appreciably and quantitatively slower in performing subjective self-assessment tasks, this argues for objective measures of sleepiness and automated interventions and the design of systems that allow better quality sleep. Practitioner summary: Work can require processing of electronic messages, but 24/7 accessibility increases workload, causes fatigue and potentially creates security risks. Although most studies use people's self-reports, this study monitors time and clicks required to complete self-assessment rating scales. Sleepiness affected online responsivity, decreasing online accuracy and increasing response times and hypervigilance.
doi_str_mv 10.1080/00140139.2023.2288808
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source Taylor & Francis Online
subjects Beds
Cell phones
Cellular telephones
Decision making
errors
Fatigue
hypervigilance
Insomnia
Internet
lapses
mobile phone
Questionnaires
Self assessment
Self evaluation
Sleep
Sleep and wakefulness
Sleep disorders
Sleepiness
Surveys
Workload
title Decisional style, sleepiness, and online responsiveness
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