Epworth Sleepiness Scale (SF-8) results showed 28.82% of participants experienced excessive daytime sleepiness sufficient enough to recommend medical attention. Upon further analysis, there was a significant negative correlation between SF-8 and CNSVS neurocognitive test outcomes including complex attention (r=-0.37; P=0.0004), cognitive flexibility (r=-0.24; P=0.0151), executive function (r=-0.21; P=0.0350), and simple attention (r=-0.36; P=0.0003) scores. This means as SF-8 scores increased (participants defined as excessively sleepy), neurocognitive function scores in these domains decreased. There was not enough evidence to conclude a significant correlation between other CNSVS domains and SF-8 (all P>0.05).