The Owls Are Not What They Seem: Health, Mood, and Sleep Problems Reported by Morning and Evening Types with Atypical Timing of Weekend Sleep.

IF 2.1 Q3 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
Arcady A Putilov, Evgeniy G Verevkin, Dmitry S Sveshnikov, Zarina V Bakaeva, Elena B Yakunina, Olga V Mankaeva, Vladimir I Torshin, Elena A Trutneva, Michael M Lapkin, Zhanna N Lopatskaya, Roman O Budkevich, Elena V Budkevich, Natalya V Ligun, Alexandra N Puchkova, Vladimir B Dorokhov
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Abstract

Morningness-eveningness is usually assessed as either a trait or a state using either a morning-evening preference scale or sleep timing reported for free days, respectively. These assessments were implemented in numerous studies exploring the associations between morningness-eveningness and health, mood, and sleep problems. Evening types almost always had more problems than morning types. We examined these associations in university students with conflicting results of trait and state assessments of morningness-eveningness and tried to confirm their chronotype using a multidimensional chronotyping approach that recognizes four types other than morning and evening (lethargic, vigilant, napping, and afternoon). The conflicting trait and state assessments of morningness-eveningness were found in 141 of 1582 students. Multidimensional chronotyping supported morningness of morning types with late weekend sleep timing, and the associations with health, mood, and sleep problems resembled the associations of other morning types (i.e., these associations persisted despite late sleep timing). In contrast, evening types with early weekend sleep timing were more likely classified as lethargic or napping types rather than evening types. They did not resemble evening types in their associations with health, mood, and sleep problems (i.e., early sleep timing did not change these associations). Model-based simulations of the sleep-wake cycles of students with conflicting trait and state assessments suggested that their bedtimes cannot be solely determined by their biological clocks. On weekdays or weekends, mind-bedtime procrastination can lead to missing the bedtime signal from their biological clocks (i.e., self-deprivation of sleep or, in other words, voluntary prolongation of the wake phase of the sleep-wake cycle).

Abstract Image

Abstract Image

夜猫子不是他们看起来的那样:周末睡眠时间不典型的早睡型和晚睡型报告的健康、情绪和睡眠问题。
“早睡晚睡”通常被评估为一种特质或一种状态,分别使用早晚偏好量表或免费日的睡眠时间报告。这些评估在许多探索早睡晚睡与健康、情绪和睡眠问题之间关系的研究中得到了实施。夜猫子几乎总是比早起的人有更多的问题。我们在大学生中对这些关联进行了研究,结果与对“早睡型”和“晚睡型”的特征和状态评估结果相矛盾,并试图使用一种多维时间分型方法来确认他们的时间类型,这种方法可以识别出早晨和晚上以外的四种类型(嗜睡型、警惕型、午睡型和下午型)。在1582名学生中,有141名学生对“早睡型”和“晚睡型”的性格特征和状态评估存在矛盾。多维时间分型支持早起型的人周末晚睡,并且与健康、情绪和睡眠问题的关联类似于其他早起型的人(即,尽管睡眠时间晚,这些关联仍然存在)。相比之下,晚睡型和周末早睡型更有可能被归类为嗜睡型或打盹型,而不是晚睡型。他们在健康、情绪和睡眠问题方面与夜猫子不同(也就是说,早睡并没有改变这些联系)。基于模型的睡眠-觉醒周期模拟的学生有矛盾的特质和状态评估表明,他们的就寝时间不能完全由他们的生物钟决定。在工作日或周末,大脑就寝拖延症会导致他们错过生物钟发出的就寝信号(即,自我剥夺睡眠,或者换句话说,自愿延长睡眠-觉醒周期的觉醒阶段)。
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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来源期刊
Clocks & Sleep
Clocks & Sleep Multiple-
CiteScore
4.40
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0.00%
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审稿时长
7 weeks
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