Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 52
pro vyhledávání: '"Tina M. Burke"'
Autor:
Walter Sowden, Ashlee B. McKeon, Tina M. Burke, Janna Mantua, Bradley M. Ritland, Maddison Pirner, Alexxa F. Bessey, Jacob A. Naylor, Scott Doyle
Publikováno v:
Sleep Health. 7:500-503
Objective To assess the relationship between sleep quality and occupational well-being in active duty military Service Members. Design Longitudinal prospective analysis. Setting An annual military training event. Participants US Army special operatio
Publikováno v:
Proceedings of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society Annual Meeting. 64:971-975
In the digital age, the military is developing cutting edge technologies (e.g., heads-up and mixed reality displays, night vision devices, etc.) to maximize situational awareness and effectiveness. Effects of light exposure from screen-based systems
Autor:
Jake Choynowski, Tina M. Burke, Walter Sowden, Ashlee B. McKeon, Vincent F. Capaldi, Jaime K. Devine, Kajsa Carlsson
Publikováno v:
Military Medical Research, Vol 7, Iss 1, Pp 1-13 (2020)
Military Medical Research
Military Medical Research
Background The Walter Reed Army Institute of Research (WRAIR) Operational Research Kit-Actigraphy (WORK-A) is a set of unique practice parameters and actigraphy-derived measures for the analysis of operational military sleep patterns. The WORK-A draw
Publikováno v:
Military medicine. 187(11-12)
Introduction Musculoskeletal injuries (MSKIs) are a significant health problem in the military. Accordingly, identifying risk factors associated with MSKI to develop targeted strategies that attenuate injury risk remains a top priority within the mil
Autor:
Bradley M Ritland, Jacob A Naylor, Alexxa F Bessey, Tina M Burke, Julie M Hughes, Stephen A Foulis, Walter J Sowden, Janna Mantua
Publikováno v:
Military Medicine.
Introduction Musculoskeletal injuries and insufficient sleep are common among U.S. Army Rangers. There has been limited research into whether indices of sleep differ between injured and uninjured Rangers. The purpose of this study was to investigate
Autor:
Janna Mantua, Carolyn Mickelson, Bradley M. Ritland, Walter Sowden, Ashlee B. McKeon, Jacob A. Naylor, Alexxa F. Bessey, J Choynowski, Tina M. Burke, Guido Simonelli
Publikováno v:
BMJ military health.
BackgroundUS military service members have characteristically poor sleep, even when ‘in garrison’ or at one’s home base. The physical sleeping environment, which is often poor in military-provided housing or barracks, may contribute to poor sle
Autor:
Allison J. Brager, Kevin Maguire, Lillian Skeiky, Peter Lisman, Joshua N Wilder, Devon A. Dobrosielski, J Choynowski, Tina M. Burke, Vincent F. Capaldi
Publikováno v:
Journal of strength and conditioning research. 34(3)
Burke, TM, Lisman, PJ, Maguire, K, Skeiky, L, Choynowski, JJ, CapaldiII, VF, Wilder, JN, Brager, AJ, and Dobrosielski, DA. Examination of sleep and injury among college football athletes. J Strength Cond Res 34(3): 609-616, 2020-The purpose of this s
Autor:
Scott Doyle, Tina M. Burke, Maddison Pirner, Jacob A. Naylor, Bradley M. Ritland, Walter Sowden, Ashlee B. McKeon, Alexxa F. Bessey, Janna Mantua
Publikováno v:
Sleep. 44:A122-A123
Introduction Insufficient sleep is ubiquitous among active duty service members in operational settings. Although insufficient sleep has been linked to poor cognitive, psychological, and physiological outcomes in military populations, little research
Autor:
Fred W. Turek, Martha Hotz Vitaterna, Pieter C. Dorrestein, Kate E. Sprecher, Kenneth P. Wright, Christopher M. Depner, Antonio Gonzalez, Monika Fleshner, Rob Knight, Christopher A. Lowry, Tina M. Burke, Dana Withrow
Publikováno v:
Sleep. 44:A46-A47
Introduction Disturbed gut microbiome diversity has been associated with poor health outcomes and various disease states. We investigated the impact of combined sleep restriction (3h time in bed [TIB] sleep opportunities per day) and circadian misali
Autor:
Andrew W. McHill, Tristan B. Dear, Hannah K. Ritchie, Kenneth P. Wright, Tina M. Burke, John Axelsson
Publikováno v:
Journal of Sleep Research. 26:551-558
Summary Sleep inertia is affected by circadian phase, with worse performance upon awakening from sleep during the biological night than biological day. Visual search/selective visual attention performance is known to be sensitive to sleep inertia and