The impact of 7-hour and 11-hour rest breaks between shifts on heavy vehicle truck drivers' sleep, alertness and naturalistic driving performance

  • National Transport Commission Heavy Vehicle Driver Project Team
  • , Jennifer M. Cori*
  • , Luke A. Downey
  • , Tracey L. Sletten
  • , Caroline J. Beatty
  • , Brook A. Shiferaw
  • , Shamsi Shekari Soleimanloo
  • , Sophie Turner
  • , Aqsa Naqvi
  • , Maree Barnes
  • , Jonny Kuo
  • , Michael G. Lenné
  • , Clare Anderson
  • , Andrew J. Tucker
  • , Alexander P. Wolkow
  • , Anna Clark
  • , Shantha M.W. Rajaratnam
  • , Mark E. Howard
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

BACKGROUND: An inadequate rest break between shifts may contribute to driver sleepiness. This study assessed whether extending the major rest break between shifts from 7-hours (Australian industry standard) to 11-hours, improved drivers' sleep, alertness and naturalistic driving performance.

METHODS: 17 heavy vehicle drivers (16 male) were recruited to complete two conditions. Each condition comprised two 13-hour shifts, separated by either a 7- or 11-hour rest break. The initial 13-hour shift was the drivers' regular work. The rest break and following 13-hour shift were simulated. The simulated shift included 5-hours of naturalistic driving with measures of subjective sleepiness, physiological alertness (ocular and electroencephalogram) and performance (steering and lane departures).

RESULTS: 13 drivers provided useable data. Total sleep during the rest break was greater in the 11-hour than the 7-hour condition (median hours [25th to 75th percentile] 6.59 [6.23, 7.23] vs. 5.07 [4.46, 5.38], p = 0.008). During the simulated shift subjective sleepiness was marginally better for the 11-hour condition (mean Karolinska Sleepiness Scale [95th CI] = 4.52 [3.98, 5.07] vs. 5.12 [4.56, 5.68], p = 0.009). During the drive, ocular and vehicle metrics were improved for the 11-hour condition (p <0.05). Contrary to expectations, mean lane departures p/hour were increased during the 11-hour condition (1.34 [-0.38,3.07] vs. 0.63 [-0.2,1.47], p = 0.027).

CONCLUSIONS: Extending the major rest between shifts substantially increases sleep duration and has a modest positive impact on driver alertness and performance. Future work should replicate the study in a larger sample size to improve generalisability and assess the impact of consecutive 7-hour major rest breaks.

Original languageEnglish
Article number106224
Number of pages13
JournalAccident Analysis & Prevention
Volume159
Early online date27 Jun 2021
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Sept 2021

Bibliographical note

Copyright © 2021 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Keywords

  • Accidents, Traffic
  • Australia
  • Automobile Driving
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Motor Vehicles
  • Sleep
  • Wakefulness
  • Work Schedule Tolerance

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