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Prolonged exertion of self-control causes increased sleep-like frontal brain activity and changes in aggressivity and punishment

Psychology

Prolonged exertion of self-control causes increased sleep-like frontal brain activity and changes in aggressivity and punishment

E. Ordali, P. Marcos-prieto, et al.

Exerting self-control for about 45 minutes increases the likelihood of aggressive choices in social interactions and is linked to increased sleep-like (delta) EEG activity in frontal decision-making regions—suggesting brief local ‘micro-sleeps’ can impair impulse control. Research conducted by Erica Ordali, Pablo Marcos-Prieto, Giulia Avvenuti, Emiliano Ricciardi, Leonardo Boncinelli, Pietro Pietrini, Giulio Bernardi, Ennio Bilancini.

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
Impulsive reactions in social interactions may result in poor outcomes. Cognitive states like mental fatigue from extended practice with demanding tasks—especially under sleep restriction—appear to impair self-control and foster impulsive behaviors, including aggression. This study demonstrates that exerting self-control for ~45 minutes increases the propensity to engage in aggressive acts in socially relevant choices, as measured via economic games. These behavioral changes are associated with increased sleep-like (delta) EEG activity within frontal areas implicated in decision-making and impulse control. Local sleep-like slow waves may disengage frontal regions, reducing effective self-control. Results suggest sleep-like activity can emerge in the awake brain on relatively short timescales and measurably impact socially relevant behavior.
Publisher
PNAS
Published On
Nov 11, 2024
Authors
Erica Ordali, Pablo Marcos-Prieto, Giulia Avvenuti, Emiliano Ricciardi, Leonardo Boncinelli, Pietro Pietrini, Giulio Bernardi, Ennio Bilancini
Tags
self-control depletion
impulsivity
mental fatigue
sleep-like delta EEG
frontal cortex
economic games
local sleep/microsleep
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