El-Sheikh Mona, Buckhalt Joseph A, Keller Peggy S, Cummings E Mark, Acebo Christine
Department of Human Development and Family Studies, Auburn University, Auburn, AL 36849, USA.
J Fam Psychol. 2007 Mar;21(1):29-38. doi: 10.1037/0893-3200.21.1.29.
The authors examined children's sleep as an intervening variable in the connection between emotional insecurity in the family and academic achievement. The role of ethnicity (African American and European American) and socioeconomic status (SES) in moderating the examined relations was assessed. One hundred sixty-six children (8- and 9-year-olds) reported their emotional insecurity, and the quantity and quality of children's sleep were examined through actigraphy and self-report. Decreased amount and quality of sleep were intervening variables in the relations between insecurity in the marital relationship and children's achievement. The effects of disrupted sleep on achievement were more pronounced for both African American children and children of lower SES. Results highlight the importance of the contemporaneous examinations of family and sleep functioning in the prediction of child outcomes.
作者们将儿童睡眠作为家庭中情感不安全感与学业成绩之间联系的一个中介变量进行了研究。评估了种族(非裔美国人和欧裔美国人)和社会经济地位(SES)在调节所研究关系中的作用。166名8岁和9岁的儿童报告了他们的情感不安全感,并通过活动记录仪和自我报告来检测儿童睡眠的数量和质量。睡眠数量和质量的下降是婚姻关系中的不安全感与儿童成绩之间关系的中介变量。睡眠中断对成绩的影响在非裔美国儿童和社会经济地位较低的儿童中更为明显。研究结果凸显了同时考察家庭和睡眠功能对预测儿童发展结果的重要性。