青少年睡眠的个体内部波动预测随后的目标设定。

Q2 Psychology
Journal for Person-Oriented Research Pub Date : 2022-01-13 eCollection Date: 2021-01-01 DOI:10.17505/jpor.2021.23796
Laura E Michaelson, Juliette Berg, Michelle J Boyd-Brown, Whitney Cade, Dian Yu, G John Geldhof, Pei-Jung Yang, Paul A Chase, David Osher, Richard M Lerner
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引用次数: 1

摘要

本研究的目的是调查青少年睡眠与随后的目标设定之间的人际关系。我们进行了一项密集的重复测量纵向研究,以评估睡眠与目标设定之间的个体内部和个体之间的关联,以及这种关联的潜在调节因素。39名7年级到12年级的学生报告了他们的睡眠质量和在日常生活中设定目标的倾向,每周几次,持续大约四个月。我们结合使用了具有时变协变量的多层建模和定心技术来划分人内和人之间的方差。我们发现睡眠和个人目标设定之间存在显著的正相关,但个人之间没有这种关联。也就是说,相对于他们自己的平均睡眠质量,学生们在获得一个良好的睡眠后更有可能为他们的工作设定目标,但相对于其他人的平均睡眠质量与平均目标设定没有关联。这些关系不受参与者的年龄、性别或母亲教育程度所指示的社会人口状况的影响。青少年之间平均睡眠时间的差异对他们设定目标的倾向的影响较小,重要的是他们在前一天晚上的平均睡眠时间比平时好还是差。这一发现首次证明了睡眠对目标设定的影响,目标设定是许多青少年行为和成就结果的重要心理前兆。我们的研究结果强调了睡眠需求的个性,并为针对青少年的睡眠相关实践和政策指明了新的方向。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Intraindividual Fluctuations in Sleep Predict Subsequent Goal Setting in Adolescents.

Intraindividual Fluctuations in Sleep Predict Subsequent Goal Setting in Adolescents.

The purpose of this study was to investigate within- and between-person associations between sleep and subsequent goal setting in adolescents. We conducted an intensive repeated measures longitudinal study to assess intra- and inter-individual associations between sleep and goal setting and potential moderators of such associations. Thirty-nine seventh through 12th graders reported on their sleep quality and propensity to set goals in their daily lives several times per week for approximately four months. We used a combination of multilevel modeling with time-varying covariates and centering techniques to partition within- and between-person variance. We found significant and positive associations between sleep and goal setting within individuals, but no such associations between individuals. That is, students were more likely to set goals for their work after getting a good night's sleep relative to their own average sleep quality, but getting good sleep on average relative to other individuals showed no association with average goal setting. These relationships were not moderated by participant age, gender, or sociodemographic status as indexed by maternal education. Differences in average sleep between adolescents matters less for their propensity to set goals than whether they experienced better- or worse-than-usual sleep the previous night given their own average. This finding represents the first evidence documenting effects of sleep on goal setting, which is an important psychological precursor to many youth behavioral and achievement outcomes. Our findings highlight the individuality of sleep needs and point to new directions for sleep-related practice and policy aimed at youth.

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来源期刊
Journal for Person-Oriented Research
Journal for Person-Oriented Research Psychology-Psychology (miscellaneous)
CiteScore
2.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
9
审稿时长
23 weeks
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