Sleepless in Society: Introducing the Concept of Public Sleep.

IF 2.1 Q3 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
Tony J Cunningham, Shengzi Zeng, Seo Ho Song
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Abstract

Major social, cultural, and sociopolitical events routinely disrupt daily life, yet their effects on sleep are rarely conceptualized at the population level beyond anecdotal sharing. The purpose of this Opinion piece is to initiate a preliminary discussion of "public sleep" as a novel construct describing systematic, event-related changes in sleep timing, duration, and quality that emerge coherently within communities in response to shared social experiences. Drawing on similarities with the well-established concept of public mood, we posit that sleep can be shaped by social environments in which shared attention, emotional climate, and coordinated schedules exert systematic influence. In support of this claim, we describe preliminary evidence from diverse domains demonstrating population-level sleep disruption following major events, including the transition to Daylight Saving Time, national elections, prolonged crises such as the COVID-19 pandemic and armed conflicts, and highly salient cultural activities such as major sporting events. These reports from disparate fields provide an initial indication that public sleep disruptions can be acute or prolonged, geographically localized or global, and may be shaped by the duration, emotional intensity, and perceived importance of the associated event. We further highlight the potential public health, safety, social, and economic consequences of collective sleep loss, underscoring its relevance beyond individual well-being. Finally, we outline key directions for future research, emphasizing the need for systematic reviews, mechanistic studies, longitudinal designs, and policy-relevant recommendations. Recognizing public sleep as a measurable population phenomenon would provide a foundation for anticipating, monitoring, and mitigating sleep disruption during periods of collective strain, with implications for both individual health and societal resilience.

社会失眠:公众睡眠概念的介绍。
重大的社会、文化和社会政治事件经常扰乱日常生活,但它们对睡眠的影响很少在人口水平上概念化,除了轶事分享。这篇观点文章的目的是对“公共睡眠”作为一种描述睡眠时间、持续时间和质量的系统的、与事件相关的变化的新结构进行初步讨论,这些变化在社区内一致出现,以响应共同的社会经验。基于与公众情绪概念的相似之处,我们假设睡眠可以由社会环境塑造,在社会环境中,共同的注意力、情绪气候和协调的时间表会产生系统的影响。为了支持这一说法,我们描述了来自不同领域的初步证据,这些证据表明,在重大事件(包括向日光节约时间过渡、全国选举、COVID-19大流行等长期危机和武装冲突)以及重大体育赛事等高度突出的文化活动之后,人口水平的睡眠会受到干扰。这些来自不同领域的报告提供了一个初步的迹象,表明公众睡眠中断可能是急性的或长期的,局部的或全球性的,并可能受到持续时间、情绪强度和相关事件的感知重要性的影响。我们进一步强调集体睡眠不足对公共卫生、安全、社会和经济的潜在影响,强调其与个人福祉的关系。最后,我们概述了未来研究的关键方向,强调系统综述、机制研究、纵向设计和政策相关建议的必要性。认识到公共睡眠是一种可测量的人口现象,将为预测、监测和减轻集体压力期间的睡眠中断提供基础,这对个人健康和社会弹性都有影响。
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
自引率
0.00%
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0
审稿时长
7 weeks
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