我要吃瓜

Article

Probing sustained attention and fatigue across the lifespan

Details

Citation

Hanzal S, Learmonth G, Thut G & Harvey M (2024) Probing sustained attention and fatigue across the lifespan. PLOS ONE, 19 (7), Art. No.: e0292695. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0292695

Abstract
Trait fatigues reflects tiredness that persists throughout a prolonged period, whereas state fatigue is a short-term reaction to intense or prolonged effort. We investigated the impact of sustained attention (using the SART) on both trait and state fatigue levels in the general population. An online version of the SART was undertaken by 115 participants, stratified across the whole adult lifespan. While pre-task trait fatigue was a strong indicator of the initial state fatigue levels, undergoing the task itself induced an increase in reported subjective state fatigue, and an accompanying reduction in subjective energy rating. Consistent with this finding, greater subjective state fatigue levels were associated with reduced accuracy. In addition, age was the best predictor of inter-participant accuracy (the older the participants, the greater the accuracy), and learning (i.e., task duration reducing reaction times). Moreover, a ceiling effect occurred where participants with higher trait fatigue did not experience greater state fatigue changes relative to those with low trait scores. In summary, we found improved accuracy in older adults, as well as a tight coupling between state fatigue and SART performance decline (in an online environment). The findings warrant further investigation into fatigue as a dynamic, task-dependent state and into SART performance as an objective measure and inducer of fatigue.

Journal
PLOS ONE: Volume 19, Issue 7

StatusPublished
Funders and
Publication date17/07/2024
Publication date online17/07/2024
Date accepted by journal24/04/2024
URL
PublisherPublic Library of Science (PLoS)
eISSN1932-6203

People (1)

Dr Gemma Learmonth

Dr Gemma Learmonth

Lecturer in Psychology, Psychology

Files (1)