Literature DB >> 33588521

Day-to-day associations between sleep characteristics and affect in community dwelling adults.

Patricia M Wong1,2, Brant P Hasler3, Thomas W Kamarck4, Aidan G C Wright4, Martica Hall3, Mary A Carskadon1,2, Lei Gao5,6, Stephen B Manuck4.   

Abstract

Despite the high co-occurrence of sleep and mood disturbances, day-to-day associations between sleep characteristics (sleep duration, continuity, and timing) and dimensions of mood (positive affect and negative affect) remain unclear. The present study aimed to test whether there is a daily, bidirectional association between these sleep characteristics and affective states, while addressing methodological limitations in the extant literature by using actiography and ecological momentary assessment methods. Participants were community dwelling, midlife adults (aged 30-54 years, N = 462, 47% male) drawn from the Adult Health and Behavior Project-Phase 2 study. Participants' sleep patterns were assessed with actiography over a 7-day monitoring period, and on 4 of those days, participants completed an ecological momentary assessment protocol that included hourly assessments of positive affect and negative affect during their wake intervals. Using hierarchical linear modelling, we tested whether participants' sleep characteristics on a given night predicted next-day affect and vice versa. We also explored whether nocturnal sleep characteristics would differentially associate with affect at different times of day (morning, afternoon, and evening) while controlling for multiple health behaviours. We found that when participants reported higher positive affect on a given day, they slept later that night (B = 0.22, p = .010). Although we found no other statistically significant associations in our primary analyses (all p > .05), we found several sleep-affect associations specific to time of day (B ranges: 0.01-0.18, all p ≤ .02), which warrants further study. Overall, our findings suggest that healthy adults may be resilient to daily fluctuations in their sleep and mood.
© 2021 European Sleep Research Society.

Entities:  

Keywords:  affect; daily variability; intra-individual variability; mood; sleep

Mesh:

Year:  2021        PMID: 33588521      PMCID: PMC8637582          DOI: 10.1111/jsr.13297

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Sleep Res        ISSN: 0962-1105            Impact factor:   3.981


  31 in total

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4.  Chronotype predicts positive affect rhythms measured by ecological momentary assessment.

Authors:  Megan A Miller; Scott D Rothenberger; Brant P Hasler; Shannon D Donofry; Patricia M Wong; Stephen B Manuck; Thomas W Kamarck; Kathryn A Roecklein
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6.  Relationship between reported and measured sleep times: the sleep heart health study (SHHS).

Authors:  Graciela E Silva; James L Goodwin; Duane L Sherrill; Jean L Arnold; Richard R Bootzin; Terry Smith; Joyce A Walsleben; Carol M Baldwin; Stuart F Quan
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7.  Rumination predicts longer sleep onset latency after an acute psychosocial stressor.

Authors:  Peggy M Zoccola; Sally S Dickerson; Suman Lam
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8.  Mood and the circadian system: investigation of a circadian component in positive affect.

Authors:  Greg Murray; Nicholas B Allen; John Trinder
Journal:  Chronobiol Int       Date:  2002-11       Impact factor: 2.877

9.  Effects of cognitive arousal and physiological arousal on sleep perception.

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10.  Day-to-day associations between subjective sleep and affect in regard to future depression in a female population-based sample.

Authors:  Jessica A de Wild-Hartmann; Marieke Wichers; Alex L van Bemmel; Catherine Derom; Evert Thiery; Nele Jacobs; Jim van Os; Claudia J P Simons
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