Close X
Wednesday, January 15, 2025
ADVT 
National

Canada-Based 'World's Largest Sleep Study' Seeks Online Volunteers

IANS, 27 Jun, 2017 11:55 AM
  • Canada-Based 'World's Largest Sleep Study' Seeks Online Volunteers
TORONTO — Brain scientists at a Canadian university are aiming to get a better handle on how sleep affects memory, problem solving, and other cognitive functions in what they are billing as the largest such study ever to be done.
 
The researchers at Western University, based in London, Ont., are hoping to recruit upwards of 100,000 participants from around the world for the online study.
 
"There's a lot about sleep and sleep deprivation and its effects on the brain that we just don't know," Bobby Stojanoski, one of the research scientists, said in an interview. "For instance, how much sleep is necessary? Is that true for everybody? Are there certain sub-populations who require more or less sleep?"
 
A suite of 12 online tests will be used to assess how changes in sleep patterns affect performance. To take part, users register online — at worldslargestsleepstudy.com. The idea is then, over a three-day period, to do the brain-function tests and fill in a questionnaire regarding sleep.
 
Volunteer participants will then get a report on how they fared, and how they stacked up against others who've done the same testing.
 
"We all have a bad night of sleep every once in a while, and we drive our cars and we go to work, but are we doing this in a cognitively deprived state?" Stojanoski said. "We hope to answer these questions."
 
 
The online tests, which can done on any computer, tablet or smart phone, are designed to assess different kinds of thinking. They involve challenges such as finding odd-one-out shapes, moving numbers into place, and grammatical tests.
 
Some preliminary participants have already taken the tests and were given brain scans when fully rested and after a sleepless night, something not practical on a wider scale. The online study — which about 15,000 people had signed up to take part in as of Tuesday morning — aims to extract equivalent information on a much larger scale.
 
While there's no end date to the study, the researchers hope to have gathered enough information to start their analysis and begin reporting out by the end of the year.
 
Led by neuroscientist Adrian Owen at the university's Brain and Mind Institute, the handful of researchers hope that recruiting huge numbers of participants of various ages and all walks of life will lend a statistical reliability to the data collected.
 
"Our goal is to be the world's largest sleep study ever conducted," Stojanoski said. "With more people, we can more accurately assess how fluctuations in your sleep affect cognition."
 
While other sleep studies have claimed to be the "largest," the Western researchers say none has been subject to the scientific rigour of this study or examined links between cognition and sleep.
 
Owen, who is chief scientific officer of Toronto-based Cambridge Brain Sciences, which designed the tests, has garnered attention for his brain research. His work includes showing that some apparently unresponsive brain-injured patients can actually be aware of their condition and can communicate.
 
"We have the opportunity in this study to learn far more about the brain's response to sleep than we have ever had before," Owen said in a statement. "What we learn ultimately has the potential to change how millions of people go about their daily lives."

MORE National ARTICLES

Vancouver Aquarium Opposes Park Board Proposal Banning Captive Whales, Dolphins

Vancouver Aquarium Opposes Park Board Proposal Banning Captive Whales, Dolphins
VANCOUVER — There will be no new whales, dolphins or porpoises kept at the Vancouver Aquarium in the future if the city's park board approves changes to its cetaceans bylaw on Monday.

Vancouver Aquarium Opposes Park Board Proposal Banning Captive Whales, Dolphins

Bell Appeals To Cord-cutters With Live TV Streaming Service Alt TV

Bell Appeals To Cord-cutters With Live TV Streaming Service Alt TV
It starts at $14.95 per month for a package of 30 channels, which includes Canadian networks CBC, CTV, Global and City and the big U.S. networks ABC, CBS, Fox and NBC

Bell Appeals To Cord-cutters With Live TV Streaming Service Alt TV

Drug Checks At B.C. Supervised Injection Site Found 80% Contained Fentanyl

Drug Checks At B.C. Supervised Injection Site Found 80% Contained Fentanyl
A pilot project to test street drugs for fentanyl at the Vancouver safe injection centre Insite has found that about 80 per cent were laced with the potentially deadly opioid.

Drug Checks At B.C. Supervised Injection Site Found 80% Contained Fentanyl

Preet Bharara Calls For Independent Counsel For US' Russia Probe

Jim (James) Comey was once my boss and remains my friend. I know that many people are mad at him. He has at different times become a cause for people's frustration and anger on both sides of the aisle.

Preet Bharara Calls For Independent Counsel For US' Russia Probe

Asylum Claims, RCMP Interceptions Down Slightly In April

Asylum Claims, RCMP Interceptions Down Slightly In April
OTTAWA — New figures released Monday show that in April, the total number of people intercepted by the RCMP crossing illegally into Canada fell, as did the total number of asylum claims overall.

Asylum Claims, RCMP Interceptions Down Slightly In April

Search Suspended For Fire Chief Missing From Cache Creek, B.C.

Search Suspended For Fire Chief Missing From Cache Creek, B.C.
ASHCROFT, B.C. — Police say the search has been suspended for a fire chief believed to have been swept away by high flood waters in British Columbia's interior.

Search Suspended For Fire Chief Missing From Cache Creek, B.C.