Work and rest on nuclear submarines
- 1 August 1981
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Ergonomics
- Vol. 24 (8) , 593-610
- https://doi.org/10.1080/00140138108924882
Abstract
Hours of work and sleep were recorded in daily activity logs by 46 enlisted men on two fleet ballistic missile submarines during routine patrols. Total working time (watch standing, non-watch work, and study) averaged 12 hours a day. Daily steep time averaged 8.4 hours a day on one ship and 7-6 on the other. Sleep was mildly fragmented in that the men averaged 1 ? sleep episodes, of somewhat less than 6 hours duration, in 24 hours. Thirty of the men were standing watch on a 6-hours-on-12-hours-off rotation which effectively imposed an 18-hour cycle on their activities. The 6-on-12-off watch schedule appeared to result in less sleep fragmentation than the traditional 4-on-8-off schedule employed on other Naval ships. Questions in the logs were used to assess subjective sleep quality and sleepiness. Sleep quality on patrol was not as good as in a post-patrol period, but the difference between on- and off-patrol sleep quality was small.This publication has 11 references indexed in Scilit:
- Effects of Habitual Variations in Napping on Psychomotor Performance, Memory and Subjective StatesInternational Journal of Neuroscience, 1979
- The Circadian System of ManPublished by Springer Nature ,1979
- Features of Circadian Rhythms Relevant for the Design of Shift SchedulesErgonomics, 1978
- Performance and Mood During and After Gradual Sleep ReductionPsychophysiology, 1977
- The effects of changing the phase and duration of sleep.Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 1976
- Reliabilities and Validities of the Mood QuestionnairePsychological Reports, 1974
- The Effects of a Chronic Limitation of Sleep LengthPsychophysiology, 1974
- Acute Shifts in the Sleep-Wakefulness Cycle: Effects on Performance and MoodPsychosomatic Medicine, 1974
- Quantification of Sleepiness: A New ApproachPsychophysiology, 1973
- Reported sleep characteristics: Effects of age, sleep length and psychiatric impairmentComprehensive Psychiatry, 1971