276 research outputs found

    Emotions relating to romantic love-further disruptors of adolescent sleep

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    Objective: Early-stage romantic involvement may resemble hypomania in its manifestation on behavioral, physiological, and psychological levels. Previous research suggests that self-reported sleep duration may diminish as a result of falling in love during adolescence. We investigated how feelings of infatuation are related to subjective and objective measures of sleep duration, quality, and timing. Methods: 1374 adolescents (66% girls; mean age: 16.9, SD=0.6 years) selected from the population register responded to online questionnaires regarding romantic love, mental well-being, and sleep behavior. A sub-sample (n=309) underwent a week-long actigraphy measurement (GENEActiv Original). We compared the sleep duration, quality, and timing of those who reported being in the early stages of love to those who were not. Results: 11% of all participants reported being in the early stages of romantic love. Those girls and boys who were in love had higher scores of depression and anxiety than others. Girls who were in love reported poorer sleep quality, later sleep timing, and shorter sleep duration both on weekdays (mean difference: 32 minutes, p Conclusions: We conclude that romantic love is one further cause for short or poor quality sleep in girls and may relate to symptoms of depression and anxiety in both sexes. However, feelings of infatuation contain important developmental lessons. (C) 2020 National Sleep Foundation. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.Peer reviewe

    Does counter-habitual behavior carry psychological costs?

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    Experience sampling studies have shown that people act out of character a lot of the time. These findings have raised the question of potential costs of counter-habitual behavior. The present experience sampling study (N = 242; measurement occasions = 4342) tested, for five behavioral dimensions derived from the Big Five theory, whether self-reported counter-habitual behavior is related to psychological costs in everyday life. The results mostly supported the view that engaging in desirable counter-habitual behaviors is beneficial, though some evidence for counter-habitual costs was found for self-control. Overall, the results suggest that the state-content significance hypothesis better accounts for everyday life behavioral, affective, and self-regulatory processes than the views highlighting the importance of acting according to one's "true self" (C) 2021 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Inc. This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).Peer reviewe

    Adolescent circadian patterns link with psychiatric problems : A multimodal approach

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    Circadian rhythms orchestrate brain function and mental wellbeing. We compared circadian patterns derived from continuous measurements of body temperature, sleep actigraphy and self-reported circadian preference in relation to different psychiatric disorders. 342 adolescents (70% females) aged 17.4y underwent M.I.N.I. psychiatric interviews, wore Ibutton 1922L skin temperature loggers (n = 281; 3 days), completed one-week GeneActiv Original actigraphy measurements (n = 306) and responded to Morningness-Eveningness Questionnaire (MEQ; n = 330). We derived circadian period length and amplitude from the temperature loggers. Actigraphy measures included sleep duration, midpoint, efficiency, and irregularity as well as Delayed Sleep Phase (DSP) characteristics (bedtime after 1 a.m. 3 times/week). M.I.N.I. psychiatric interviews suggested that 36% of participants had one or more psychiatric problem, with 21% suffering from comorbidity. Severe depression was associated with longer circadian period (p = 0.002). Suicidality was associated with later midpoint (p = 0.007) and more irregular sleep (p = 0.007). Those with agoraphobia slept longer (p = 0.013). Manic episodes and psychotic disorders were associated with irregular sleep (p-values < 0.02). DSP was related to suicidality (p = 0.026), panic disorder (p = 0.022), and greater comorbidity (p = 0.026). Preference for eveningness was similarly related to higher prevalence of Generalized Anxiety Disorder (p = 0.014), social anxiety (p = 0.03), agoraphobia (p = 0.026), panic disorder (p = 0.004), suicidality (p = 0.018), severe depression (p < 0.001), and comorbidity (p < 0.001). Deviations in circadian rhythms were widely associated with psychiatric problems, whereas sleep duration was not. Especially suicidality linked with several markers of circadian disruption: later sleep midpoint, irregular sleep, and DSP characteristics. Longer circadian period length was associated with severe depression.Peer reviewe

    Dynamic fluctuations of emotional states in adolescents with delayed sleep phase-A longitudinal network modeling approach

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    Background: Very late sleep rhythms are risks for social adjustment problems in adolescence. Using ecological momentary assessment data, we quantified and visualized temporal and contemporaneous within-persons dynamical relations of sleepiness and emotions in adolescents with and without late sleep rhythms. Methods: We analyzed a temporal network via multilevel vector autoregression (mlVAR) modeling and a contemporaneous network through the partial associations between the residuals of temporal and the between-subject multilevel models. We tested whether these networks were different between those with a late circadian rhythm [concurrent delayed sleep phase (DSP) N = 172, 37% boys, 63% girls] and those without (N = 143, 22% boys, 78% girls). Results: In adolescents without DSP, the temporal networks showed continuity only for low mood from the previous to the following time point. In adolescents with DSP, there were more predictable patterns of emotions. Feelings of depression led to a decrease of positive emotions and increase of irritation and anxiety. The contemporaneous networks showed clusters of positive and negative emotions in both groups and sleepiness decreased the experience of positive emotions concurrently. Limitations: DSP in our current study was based only on one out of three diagnostic criteria of the full disorder (DSM-5) and it was assessed only once. Conclusions: These findings indicate that the dynamic organization of emotions and sleepiness is different in adolescents with and without DSP. DSP adolescents have more predictable and maladaptive emotional patterns during the day. Results provide new insight about why individuals with DSP are at a heightened risk for decreased emotional adjustment.Peer reviewe

    Assessment of time window for sleep onset on the basis of continuous wrist temperature measurement

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    The interactions of the principal circadian clock with the homeostatic sleep process create the time-sensitive window for easy falling asleep in the evening, which is affected by a thermoregulatory process. It has been hypothesized that the changes in skin and core body temperatures before the sleep onset might play a direct role in sleep regulation. To determine this time window, we recorded from 20 healthy participants (11 women and 9 men), aged 26-58 years, one overnight own-home ambulatory polysomnography and measured continuously wrist skin temperature with a wrist-worn accelerometer containing a skin temperature thermometer. Wrist skin temperatures which were read out from the thermometer of the accelerometers were modeled using linear mixed models, and the linear effect of time before the sleep onset on wrist temperature was analyzed using a mixed model with the sex and age as the covariates. We found that wrist skin temperatures increased on average by 0.6 degrees (of Celcius) in 10 min prior to the sleep onset and could be tracked robustly along a slope of time (p = 0.004). Our current findings may be useful in further characterizing the window of time and its boundaries for easy falling asleep.Peer reviewe

    Viivästyneen unijakson lääkkeettömät hoidot

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    •Jopa 16 % nuorista kärsii viivästyneestä unijaksosta, jossa vuorokausirytmi jätättää merkittävällä tavalla. •Viivästynyt unijakso aiheuttaa vaikeuksia herätä ajoissa ja näin myös koulupoissaoloja. Se on yhteydessä jopa koulutuspolulta putoamiseen. •Kirkasvalohoito, kognitiivis-behavioraaliset lyhytinterventiot ja unirytmin asteittainen aikaistaminen ovat toistaiseksi keskeisimmät lääkkeettömät hoidot. •Tulosten pysyvyydestä tiedetään kuitenkin vähän, koska yhdenkään interventiotutkimuksen seuranta-aika ei yllä yli puolen vuoden. •Motivoituminen oman vuorokausirytmin pitkäaikaiseen muuttamiseen on hoidon suurin haaste. Siksi motivoitumisen ja käyttäytymismuutosten tukeminen on tärkeää. •Uusien interventioiden kehittämiseksi tarvitaan lisää tietoa unirytmin säätelyvaikeuksien etiologiasta ja vaikeuksia ylläpitävistä tekijöistä.Peer reviewe

    Viivästyneen unijakson lääkkeettömät hoidot

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    •Jopa 16 % nuorista kärsii viivästyneestä unijaksosta, jossa vuorokausirytmi jätättää merkittävällä tavalla. •Viivästynyt unijakso aiheuttaa vaikeuksia herätä ajoissa ja näin myös koulupoissaoloja. Se on yhteydessä jopa koulutuspolulta putoamiseen. •Kirkasvalohoito, kognitiivis-behavioraaliset lyhytinterventiot ja unirytmin asteittainen aikaistaminen ovat toistaiseksi keskeisimmät lääkkeettömät hoidot. •Tulosten pysyvyydestä tiedetään kuitenkin vähän, koska yhdenkään interventiotutkimuksen seuranta-aika ei yllä yli puolen vuoden. •Motivoituminen oman vuorokausirytmin pitkäaikaiseen muuttamiseen on hoidon suurin haaste. Siksi motivoitumisen ja käyttäytymismuutosten tukeminen on tärkeää. •Uusien interventioiden kehittämiseksi tarvitaan lisää tietoa unirytmin säätelyvaikeuksien etiologiasta ja vaikeuksia ylläpitävistä tekijöistä.Peer reviewe

    Self-Conscious Affect Is Modulated by Rapid Eye Movement Sleep but Not by Targeted Memory Reactivation–A Pilot Study

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    The neurophysiological properties of rapid eye movement sleep (REMS) are believed to tune down stressor-related emotional responses. While prior experimental findings are controversial, evidence suggests that affective habituation is hindered if REMS is fragmented. To elucidate the topic, we evoked self-conscious negative affect in the participants (N = 32) by exposing them to their own out-of-tune singing in the evening. Affective response to the stressor was measured with skin conductance response and subjectively reported embarrassment. To address possible inter-individual variance toward the stressor, we measured the shame-proneness of participants with an established questionnaire. The stressor was paired with a sound cue to pilot a targeted memory reactivation (TMR) protocol during the subsequent night's sleep. The sample was divided into three conditions: control (no TMR), TMR during slow-wave sleep, and TMR during REMS. We found that pre- to post-sleep change in affective response was not influenced by TMR. However, REMS percentage was associated negatively with overnight skin conductance response habituation, especially in those individuals whose REMS was fragmented. Moreover, shame-proneness interacted with REM fragmentation such that the higher the shame-proneness, the more the affective habituation was dependent on non-fragmented REMS. In summary, the potential of REMS in affective processing may depend on the quality of REMS as well as on individual vulnerability toward the stressor type.Peer reviewe

    Autistic traits and sleep in typically developing adolescents

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    Objective: Diagnosed autism spectrum disorders have been associated with a high prevalence of sleep problems, other psychiatric disorders and social deficits in adolescence. However, little is known about the possible connection between subclinical autistic traits and sleep. This study explored whether adolescents with elevated levels of subclinical autistic traits are at heightened risk for sleep problems. Methods: This study used data from the community cohort born in 1998. The sample consisted of 157 (57% girls) 17-year-old adolescents. Autistic traits were assessed using the Autism Spectrum Quotient (AQ). The Beck Anxiety Inventory (BAI), Beck Depression Inventory (BDI), and the Adult ADHD Self-Report Scale were utilized to control for comorbid psychiatric symptoms. Sleep was measured with actigraphy and sleep quality was self-rated using the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI). Associations between autistic traits and sleep were examined using logistic regression analysis. Results: Elevated levels of autistic traits were significantly associated with shorter weekday sleep duration. Moreover, autistic traits remained an independent predictor of short sleep duration when comorbid psychiatric symptoms were controlled for (OR 1.14; 95% CI: 1.03-1.26). Conclusions: The results suggest that subclinical autistic traits should be considered as a possible underlying mechanism affecting adolescent sleep. (c) 2018 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).Peer reviewe
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