内源性调节机制对工作日早起的反应:根据模型模拟回顾其流行解释

Arcady A. Putilov
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引用次数: 0

摘要

导言:对于内源性睡眠-觉醒调节过程对工作日早醒的反应机制,人们提出了几种广为流传的解释。在此,我们对这些解释进行了简要回顾,并根据睡眠-觉醒调节双过程模型的节律性版本进行了模拟验证:方法:将工作日和周末的模拟睡眠时间与 1,048 个样本中工作日早起或晚起的平均时间进行比较。共收集了 74 个在停课前和停课期间的配对样本,以及 93 个在较早和较晚开学时间的配对样本:模拟的反直觉预测包括以下几点:1)在昼夜节律睡眠-觉醒周期的睡眠-觉醒阶段经过 1 天/5 天较大幅度/较小幅度的减少/延长之后,只有一个晚上的自由睡眠才足以恢复内生决定的睡眠时间;2)工作日的睡眠损失是不可恢复的;3)无论这种自重损失有多少,周末的睡眠时间都不会延长;4)昼夜节律钟对睡眠-觉醒周期性的控制在整个一周内都不会中断:以下关于周末与工作日在睡眠时间和持续时间上的差距的流行解释并没有得到这些模拟的支持:1)工作日早醒会导致 "社会时差",即周末和工作日(前后)睡眠阶段相对于昼夜节律钟不变阶段的移动;2)工作日早醒会导致周末 "睡眠债务偿还 "的积累,或者换句话说,人们可以在周末 "补觉 "或 "补偿 "睡眠。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Reaction of the endogenous regulatory mechanisms to early weekday wakeups: a review of its popular explanations in light of model-based simulations
Introduction: Several widely held explanations of the mechanisms underlying the responses of endogenous sleep–wake-regulating processes to early weekday wakeups have been proposed. Here, they were briefly reviewed and validated against simulations based on the rhythmostatic version of a two-process model of sleep–wake regulation.Methods: Simulated sleep times on weekdays and weekends were compared with the times averaged over 1,048 samples with either earlier or later weekday risetimes. In total, 74 paired samples were collected before and during lockdown, and 93 paired samples were collected during early and later school start times.Results: The counterintuitive predictions of the simulations included the following: 1) only one night of ad lib sleep is sufficient to restore the endogenously determined sleep times after 1 day/5 days of larger/smaller reduction/extension of the sleep/wake phase of the circadian sleep–wake cycle; 2) sleep loss on weekdays is irrecoverable; 3) irrespective of the amount of such deadweight loss, sleep on weekends is not prolonged; and 4) the control of the circadian clocks over the sleep–wake cyclicity is not disrupted throughout the week.Discussion: The following popular explanations of the gaps between weekends and weekdays in sleep timing and duration were not supported by these simulations: 1) early weekday wakeups cause “social jetlag,” viewed as the weekend and weekday (back and forth) shifts of the sleep phase relative to the unchanged phase of the circadian clocks, and 2) early weekday wakeups cause an accumulation of “sleep debt paid back” on weekends, or, in other terms, people can “catch-up” or “compensate” sleep on weekends.
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