From night owl to angry bird: Investigating the association between chronotype and aggression

Leah Greenwood, Niamh Tattersall
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Abstract

Recent attempts to understand the sleep-aggression relationship highlight the importance of the role of cognition. A related but separate concept of sleep, chronotype (i.e., sleep timings) has also been suggested to contribute to levels of aggression. The current study explores the relationship between chronotype, sleep quality, hostility, aggression, and intimate partner violence (IPV). Two hundred and eight participants completed online questionnaires to explore the contribution of hostility and sleep quality as mediators of the chronotype-aggression relationship. Findings indicate that chronotype was associated with levels of aggression, with those with later chronotypes reporting higher levels of aggression. Two mediation models revealed that this relationship was mediated by hostile cognitions (i.e., hostile attribution biases), and partially mediated by sleep quality. The chronotype-IPV relationship was explored, but the association was not significant. Findings indicate that those with late chronotypes may be more susceptible to hostile cognitions which leads to aggressive outcomes. However, there may be additional factors contributing to this relationship when considering violence in relationships. Aggression-focused interventions may benefit from dissecting an individual’s sleep patterns to reduce hostile cognitions and future research would benefit from objective measures of both chronotype and aggression.
从夜猫子到愤怒的小鸟:调查睡眠类型和攻击性之间的关系
最近对睡眠攻击关系的研究强调了认知作用的重要性。睡眠的另一个相关但独立的概念,即时间类型(即睡眠时间)也被认为与攻击性水平有关。本研究探讨了睡眠类型、睡眠质量、敌意、攻击性和亲密伴侣暴力(IPV)之间的关系。288名参与者完成了在线问卷,以探索敌意和睡眠质量在时间类型-攻击关系中的中介作用。研究结果表明,时间类型与攻击水平有关,时间类型较晚的人报告的攻击水平更高。两个中介模型表明,这种关系是由敌对认知(即敌对归因偏见)介导的,部分由睡眠质量介导。研究了时间型与ipv的关系,但相关性不显著。研究结果表明,时间类型较晚的人可能更容易产生敌意认知,从而导致侵略性的结果。然而,当考虑到关系中的暴力时,可能还有其他因素导致这种关系。以攻击为中心的干预可能受益于剖析个体的睡眠模式,以减少敌意认知,未来的研究将受益于对时间类型和攻击的客观测量。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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