AbstractWe examined effects of a 20-min nap following 3 h of sleep
deprivation on brain wave activity, auditory reaction time, the
running-based anaerobic sprint test, leg muscle strength and the rating of
perceived exertion in male college soccer players. Eleven players underwent
three sleep conditions; normal sleep, sleep deprivation and 20-min nap after
sleep deprivation. The sleep deprivation demonstrated an increase in the
mean power of delta waves over the frontal area and a decrease in the mean
power of alpha waves over the parietal area compared to the normal sleep.
The nap and the sleep deprivation showed an increase in auditory reaction
time compared with those in the normal sleep. The sleep deprivation
demonstrated a decrease in the running-based anaerobic sprint test compared
to the normal sleep, whereas the nap has partially reversed only minimal
power and average power of the running-based anaerobic sprint test. The nap
showed a recovery effect on leg muscle strength, but not on the rating of
perceived exertion compared with the sleep deprivation. Thus, a 20-min nap
after sleep deprivation did not completely return brain activity back to
active state and did not entirely reverse the negative impact of sleep
deprivation on soccer performance in soccer players.
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