Keyword search (4,163 papers available)

"wearables" Keyword-tagged Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Nightly variations in sleep quality and next-day cognitive performance: an in-home study in healthy older adults Brooks M; El Chami R; Jourde HR; Savard MA; Coffey EBJ; 41878310
PSYCHOLOGY
2 PASS: A Multimodal Database of Physical Activity and Stress for Mobile Passive Body/ Brain-Computer Interface Research Parent M; Albuquerque I; Tiwari A; Cassani R; Gagnon JF; Lafond D; Tremblay S; Falk TH; 33363449
PERFORM
3 Contactless Capacitive Electrocardiography Using Hybrid Flexible Printed Electrodes. Lessard-Tremblay M, Weeks J, Morelli L, Cowan G, Gagnon G, Zednik RJ 32927651
ENCS

 

Title:Nightly variations in sleep quality and next-day cognitive performance: an in-home study in healthy older adults
Authors:Brooks MEl Chami RJourde HRSavard MACoffey EBJ
Link:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41878310/
DOI:10.3389/fnagi.2026.1714063
Publication:Frontiers in aging neuroscience
Keywords:agingcognitionsleep qualitysleep variabilitywearables
PMID:41878310 Category: Date Added:2026-03-25
Dept Affiliation: PSYCHOLOGY
1 Department of Psychology, Concordia University, Montreal, QC, Canada.
2 EngAGE: Center for Research on Aging, Montreal, QC, Canada.
3 Montreal Neurological Institute, McGill University, Montreal, QC, Canada.

Description:

Introduction: Sleep quality is often thought to be a key determinant of cognitive performance, particularly in older adults who experience age-related changes in sleep architecture. However, the extent to which nightly variations in sleep quality impact next-day cognitive performance remains unclear-in part because it has only recently become practical to measure sleep over multiple nights.

Methods: In this study, we used an in-home wearable electroencephalography (EEG) device to monitor sleep patterns over ~10 nights in 17 healthy older adults, assessing metrics of sleep quality such as wake after sleep onset and the density of slow oscillations and sleep spindles. Next-day cognitive performance was evaluated using two computerized neuropsychological tasks measuring executive functions (inhibition and cognitive flexibility), and their relationships to sleep metrics were explored.

Results: Although participants placed the EEG device themselves, a high proportion of sleep data was usable (~71%), and clear nightly variations in sleep quality were captured. Sleep recordings showed considerable variability in sleep quality metrics across nights, with large inter-individual differences. However, we found no effects of either macro- or microarchitectural sleep metrics on executive task outcomes the following day.

Discussion: These results do not rule out the possibility that some aspects of cognitive performance may be affected by daily fluctuations in sleep quality; however, they suggest that inhibition and cognitive flexibility, which underlie reasoning and problem solving, may be relatively resilient to nightly sleep variability in older adults. The findings also demonstrate the feasibility of using emerging portable devices to extend sleep studies at home and over multiple nights in older adults, while providing variance estimates and effect sizes to guide power and sample size planning for future studies.





BookR developed by Sriram Narayanan
for the Concordia University School of Health
Copyright © 2011-2026
Cookie settings
Concordia University