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Psychological effect of an analogue traumatic event reduced by sleep deprivation

Psychological effect of an analogue traumatic event reduced by sleep deprivation
Psychological effect of an analogue traumatic event reduced by sleep deprivation
Study Objective:
To examine the effect of sleep deprivation compared to sleep, immediately after experimental trauma stimuli on the development of intrusive memories to that trauma stimuli.

Design:
Participants were exposed to a film with traumatic content (trauma film). The immediate response to the trauma film was assessed, followed by either total sleep deprivation (sleep deprived group, N = 20) or sleep as usual (sleep group, N = 22). Twelve hours after the film viewing the initial psychological effect of the trauma film was measured and for the subsequent 6 days intrusive emotional memories related to the trauma film were recorded in daily life.

Setting:
Academic sleep laboratory and participants' home environment.

Participants:
Healthy paid volunteers.

Measurements and results:
On the first day after the trauma film, the psychological effect as assessed by the Impact of Event Scale – Revised was lower in the sleep deprived group compared to the sleep group. In addition, the sleep deprived group reported fewer intrusive emotional memories (mean 2.28, standard deviation [SD] 2.91) compared to the sleep group (mean 3.76, SD 3.35). Because habitual sleep/circadian patterns, psychological health, and immediate effect of the trauma film were similar at baseline for participants of both groups, the results cannot be accounted for by pre-existing inequalities between groups.

Conclusions:
Our findings suggest that sleep deprivation on one night, rather than sleeping, reduces emotional effect and intrusive memories following exposure to experimental trauma.
0161-8105
1017–1025
Porcheret, K
1d0a4692-3588-4e41-8859-d43adb64bf84
EA, Holmes
a6379ab3-b182-45f8-87c9-3e07e90fe469
GM, Goodwin
59885ad4-876f-4ce6-a792-54771aa7f9fa
RG, Foster
7295e95f-1af9-4561-8180-5b38448cdcf1
Wulff, K
9a05af03-8486-4654-9095-c9b49c44f7b7
Porcheret, K
1d0a4692-3588-4e41-8859-d43adb64bf84
EA, Holmes
a6379ab3-b182-45f8-87c9-3e07e90fe469
GM, Goodwin
59885ad4-876f-4ce6-a792-54771aa7f9fa
RG, Foster
7295e95f-1af9-4561-8180-5b38448cdcf1
Wulff, K
9a05af03-8486-4654-9095-c9b49c44f7b7

Porcheret, K, EA, Holmes, GM, Goodwin, RG, Foster and Wulff, K (2015) Psychological effect of an analogue traumatic event reduced by sleep deprivation. Sleep, 38 (7), 1017–1025. (doi:10.5665/sleep.4802).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Study Objective:
To examine the effect of sleep deprivation compared to sleep, immediately after experimental trauma stimuli on the development of intrusive memories to that trauma stimuli.

Design:
Participants were exposed to a film with traumatic content (trauma film). The immediate response to the trauma film was assessed, followed by either total sleep deprivation (sleep deprived group, N = 20) or sleep as usual (sleep group, N = 22). Twelve hours after the film viewing the initial psychological effect of the trauma film was measured and for the subsequent 6 days intrusive emotional memories related to the trauma film were recorded in daily life.

Setting:
Academic sleep laboratory and participants' home environment.

Participants:
Healthy paid volunteers.

Measurements and results:
On the first day after the trauma film, the psychological effect as assessed by the Impact of Event Scale – Revised was lower in the sleep deprived group compared to the sleep group. In addition, the sleep deprived group reported fewer intrusive emotional memories (mean 2.28, standard deviation [SD] 2.91) compared to the sleep group (mean 3.76, SD 3.35). Because habitual sleep/circadian patterns, psychological health, and immediate effect of the trauma film were similar at baseline for participants of both groups, the results cannot be accounted for by pre-existing inequalities between groups.

Conclusions:
Our findings suggest that sleep deprivation on one night, rather than sleeping, reduces emotional effect and intrusive memories following exposure to experimental trauma.

This record has no associated files available for download.

More information

Accepted/In Press date: 1 January 2015
Published date: 1 July 2015

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 508216
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/508216
ISSN: 0161-8105
PURE UUID: b2161140-c8ad-428e-82c4-8f5b38f87617
ORCID for Holmes EA: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-7319-3112

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 14 Jan 2026 17:59
Last modified: 15 Jan 2026 03:16

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Contributors

Author: K Porcheret
Author: Holmes EA ORCID iD
Author: Goodwin GM
Author: Foster RG
Author: K Wulff

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