Sleep restriction worsens mood and emotion regulation in adolescents
Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center · Emory University · +1 more institution
Abstract
The relationship between inadequate sleep and mood has been well-established in adults and is supported primarily by correlational data in younger populations. Given that adolescents often experience shortened sleep on school nights, we sought to better understand the effect of experimentally induced chronic sleep restriction on adolescents' mood and mood regulation.
Fifty healthy adolescents, ages 14-17, completed a 3-week sleep manipulation protocol involving a baseline week, followed by a sleep restriction (SR) condition (6.5 hr in bed per night for five nights) and healthy sleep duration (HS) condition (10 hr in bed per night for five nights). The study used a randomized, counterbalanced, crossover experimental design. Participants' sleep was monitored at home via self-report and actigraphy. At the end of each condition, participants and their parents completed questionnaires of mood and mood regulation. To assess for expectancy effects, we also analyzed parent and teen ratings of hyperactivity/impulsivity, which prior research suggests is not sensitive to SR in adolescents. Wilcoxon Signed Rank tests compared questionnaire outcomes across the two conditions.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 26.14
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 54
Authors
6- KTKatherine T. Baum
Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center
- ADAnjali Desai
Emory University
- JFJulie Field
Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center
- LELauren E. Miller
Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center
- JRJoseph R. Rausch
Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, University of Cincinnati Medical Center
Topics & keywords
- Actigraphy
- Psychology
- Mood
- Sleep restriction
- Irritability
- Impulsivity
- Sleep (system call)
- Sleep diary
- No poverty