Self-Reported and Measured Sleep Duration
Chicago Department of Public Health · University of Chicago · +2 more institutions
Abstract
Recent epidemiologic studies have found that self-reported duration of sleep is associated with obesity, diabetes, hypertension, and mortality. The extent to which self reports of sleep duration are similar to objective measures and whether individual characteristics influence the degree of similarity are not known.
Eligible participants at the Chicago site of the Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults Study were invited to participate in a 2003-2005 ancillary sleep study; 82% (n = 669) agreed. Sleep measurements collected in 2 waves included 3 days each of wrist actigraphy, a sleep log, and questions about usual sleep duration. We estimate the average difference and correlation between subjectively and objectively measured sleep by using errors-in-variables regression models.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 28.79
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 48
Authors
5Topics & keywords
- Actigraphy
- Sleep (system call)
- Medicine
- Sleep debt
- Obesity
- Population
- Diabetes mellitus
- Demography
- Good health and well-being