睡眠时间越长,思维越清晰:多睡能抵消年轻人和老年人睡眠质量差的影响。

Kyoungmin Cho, Soomi Lee
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:睡眠和认知功能是联系在一起的。然而,睡眠时间和睡眠质量如何影响日常的主观认知,包括认知干扰和记忆缺失,目前尚不清楚。这项研究调查了睡眠时间和睡眠质量与日常认知干扰和记忆衰退之间的独特联系,并调查了与年龄相关的变化。方法:参与者是915名成年人(43-83岁),来自美国中年研究,他们完成了8天的日记。多层次模型评估了睡眠时间和睡眠质量与认知干扰和记忆缺失之间的独特和联合关联,重点关注于人与人之间的关联,而不是人与人之间的关联。年龄分层模型探索了不同年龄组之间的潜在差异。结果:较差的睡眠质量会增加第二天的认知干扰,从而控制睡眠时间。在整个研究期间,睡眠质量较差的个体也经历了更大的认知干扰和更频繁的记忆缺失。较差的睡眠质量和较高的认知干扰之间的关联,在睡眠时间比平时长的日子里,以及在睡眠时间比样本中其他人长的个人中,都得到了缓解。年龄分层分析表明,只有在60-67岁的成年人中,较长的日常睡眠时间和习惯性睡眠时间才能减轻较差的睡眠质量对认知干扰的不利影响。讨论:睡眠时间和质量差可能会损害日常认知,然而额外的睡眠时间可以减轻睡眠质量差对日常认知干扰的负相关,特别是在年轻的老年人中。这些发现强调了睡眠时间、睡眠质量和年龄在塑造日常认知方面微妙的相互作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Sleep Longer, Think Sharper: Extra Sleep Offsets Poor Sleep Quality in Young-Old Adults.

Objectives: Sleep and cognitive functioning are linked. Yet, how sleep hours and sleep quality shape day-to-day subjective cognition, including cognitive interference and memory lapses, remains unclear. This study examined the unique and joint associations of sleep hours and quality with daily cognitive interference and memory lapses, investigating age-related variations.

Methods: Participants were 915 adults (aged 43-83) from the Midlife in the United States Study who completed eight days' diaries. Multilevel models evaluated the unique and joint associations of sleep hours and sleep quality with cognitive interference and memory lapses focusing at the within-person level, beyond between-person associations. Age-stratified models explored potential differences across age groups.

Results: Poorer sleep quality was associated with increased next-day cognitive interference, controlling for sleep hours. Individuals with poorer sleep quality across the study period also experienced greater cognitive interference and more frequent memory lapses. The association between poorer sleep quality and heightened cognitive interference was mitigated both on days when sleep hours were longer than usual and among individuals with longer sleep hours than others in the sample. Age-stratified analyses demonstrated that longer daily and habitual sleep hours mitigated the adverse effects of poorer sleep quality on cognitive interference only in adults aged 60-67.

Discussion: Poor sleep hours and quality may impair daily cognition, yet extra sleep hours can mitigate the negative association of poor sleep quality on daily cognitive interference, especially among young-old adults. These findings highlight the nuanced interplay of sleep hours, sleep quality, and age in shaping daily cognition.

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