Sleep deprivation impairs the accurate recognition of human emotions.

STUDY OBJECTIVES Investigate the impact of sleep deprivation on the ability to recognize the intensity of human facial emotions. DESIGN Randomized total sleep-deprivation or sleep-rested conditions, involving between-group and within-group repeated measures analysis. SETTING Experimental laboratory study. PARTICIPANTS Thirty-seven healthy participants, (21 females) aged 18-25 y, were randomly assigned to the sleep control (SC: n = 17) or total sleep deprivation group (TSD: n = 20). INTERVENTIONS Participants performed an emotional face recognition task, in which they evaluated 3 different affective face categories: Sad, Happy, and Angry, each ranging in a gradient from neutral to increasingly emotional. In the TSD group, the task was performed once under conditions of sleep deprivation, and twice under sleep-rested conditions following different durations of sleep recovery. In the SC group, the task was performed twice under sleep-rested conditions, controlling for repeatability. MEASUREMENTS AND RESULTS In the TSD group, when sleep-deprived, there was a marked and significant blunting in the recognition of Angry and Happy affective expressions in the moderate (but not extreme) emotional intensity range; differences that were most reliable and significant in female participants. No change in the recognition of Sad expressions was observed. These recognition deficits were, however, ameliorated following one night of recovery sleep. No changes in task performance were observed in the SC group. CONCLUSIONS Sleep deprivation selectively impairs the accurate judgment of human facial emotions, especially threat relevant (Anger) and reward relevant (Happy) categories, an effect observed most significantly in females. Such findings suggest that sleep loss impairs discrete affective neural systems, disrupting the identification of salient affective social cues.

[1]  N. Kleitman,et al.  Regularly occurring periods of eye motility, and concomitant phenomena, during sleep. , 1953, Science.

[2]  R A Levitt,et al.  Sleep Deprivation in the Rat , 1966, Science.

[3]  A. Kjellberg,et al.  Effects of 24-hour sleep deprivation on rate of decrement in a 10-minute auditory reaction time task. , 1972, Journal of experimental psychology.

[4]  W. Dement,et al.  Quantification of sleepiness: a new approach. , 1973, Psychophysiology.

[5]  J. Pilcher,et al.  Sleep deprivation in the rat: IX. Recovery. , 1989, Sleep.

[6]  M. Bradley,et al.  Looking at pictures: affective, facial, visceral, and behavioral reactions. , 1993, Psychophysiology.

[7]  R. Dolan,et al.  Neural Activation during Covert Processing of Positive Emotional Facial Expressions , 1996, NeuroImage.

[8]  A. Pack,et al.  Cumulative sleepiness, mood disturbance, and psychomotor vigilance performance decrements during a week of sleep restricted to 4-5 hours per night. , 1997, Sleep.

[9]  D. Perrett,et al.  Dissociable neural responses to facial expressions of sadness and anger. , 1999, Brain : a journal of neurology.

[10]  A. Damasio The Feeling of What Happens: Body and Emotion in the Making of Consciousness , 1999 .

[11]  J. Horne,et al.  The impact of sleep deprivation on decision making: a review. , 2000, Journal of experimental psychology. Applied.

[12]  Maria L. Thomas,et al.  Neural basis of alertness and cognitive performance impairments during sleepiness. I. Effects of 24 h of sleep deprivation on waking human regional brain activity , 2000, Journal of sleep research.

[13]  Jr. Horacio Fabrega The Feeling of What Happens: Body and Emotion in the Making of Consciousness , 2000 .

[14]  Gregory G. Brown,et al.  The Effects of Total Sleep Deprivation on Cerebral Responses to Cognitive Performance , 2001, Neuropsychopharmacology.

[15]  R. Adolphs Recognizing emotion from facial expressions: psychological and neurological mechanisms. , 2002, Behavioral and cognitive neuroscience reviews.

[16]  J. Born,et al.  Changes in Emotional Responses to Aversive Pictures Across Periods Rich in Slow-Wave Sleep Versus Rapid Eye Movement Sleep , 2002, Psychosomatic medicine.

[17]  R. Armitage,et al.  The Neurobiology of Depression: Perspectives from Animal and Human Sleep Studies , 2003, The Neuroscientist : a review journal bringing neurobiology, neurology and psychiatry.

[18]  R. Adolphs Cognitive neuroscience: Cognitive neuroscience of human social behaviour , 2003, Nature Reviews Neuroscience.

[19]  K. Hugdahl,et al.  Sleep Deprivation and Hemispheric Asymmetry for Facial Recognition Reaction Time and Accuracy , 2004, Perceptual and motor skills.

[20]  Jill Keane,et al.  Impaired recognition of anger following damage to the ventral striatum. , 2004, Brain : a journal of neurology.

[21]  R. Davidson Well-being and affective style: neural substrates and biobehavioural correlates. , 2004, Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences.

[22]  D. Baldwin,et al.  Sleep deprivation and fatigue in residency training: results of a national survey of first- and second-year residents. , 2004, Sleep.

[23]  Gregory Belenky,et al.  Erratum to “Neural basis of alertness and cognitive performance impairments during sleepiness II. Effects of 48 and 72 h of sleep deprivation on waking human regional brain activity”: [Thalamus & Related Systems 2 (2003) 199–229] , 2004 .

[24]  Dov Zohar,et al.  The effects of sleep loss on medical residents' emotional reactions to work events: a cognitive-energy model. , 2005, Sleep.

[25]  D. Dinges,et al.  Neurocognitive Consequences of Sleep Deprivation , 2005, Seminars in neurology.

[26]  R. Stickgold,et al.  Sleep, memory, and plasticity. , 2006, Annual review of psychology.

[27]  M. Wittmann,et al.  Social Jetlag: Misalignment of Biological and Social Time , 2006, Chronobiology international.

[28]  G. Pourtois,et al.  Distributed and interactive brain mechanisms during emotion face perception: Evidence from functional neuroimaging , 2007, Neuropsychologia.

[29]  J. Born,et al.  The impact of post-learning sleep vs. wakefulness on recognition memory for faces with different facial expressions , 2007, Neurobiology of Learning and Memory.

[30]  M. Walker,et al.  The human emotional brain without sleep — a prefrontal amygdala disconnect , 2007, Current Biology.

[31]  M. Gordijn,et al.  Epidemiology of the human circadian clock. , 2007, Sleep medicine reviews.

[32]  M. Carskadon,et al.  Sleep, circadian rhythms, and delayed phase in adolescence. , 2007, Sleep medicine.

[33]  J. Piven,et al.  Orienting to social stimuli differentiates social cognitive impairment in autism and schizophrenia , 2007, Neuropsychologia.

[34]  R. Armitage Sleep and circadian rhythms in mood disorders , 2007, Acta psychiatrica Scandinavica. Supplementum.

[35]  T. Nielsen,et al.  Overnight emotional adaptation to negative stimuli is altered by REM sleep deprivation and is correlated with intervening dream emotions , 2009, Journal of sleep research.

[36]  M. Walker The Role of Sleep in Cognition and Emotion , 2009, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences.

[37]  D. Dinges,et al.  Neurocognitive consequences of sleep deprivation. , 2005, Seminars in neurology.

[38]  Manuel Schabus,et al.  Homeostatic Sleep Pressure and Responses to Sustained Attention in the Suprachiasmatic Area , 2009, Science.

[39]  Daniel J. Buysse,et al.  Sleep deprivation alters pupillary reactivity to emotional stimuli in healthy young adults , 2009, Biological Psychology.