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人与动物同睡:基于活动记录仪对狗对女性夜间活动影响的评估。

Human-Animal Co-Sleeping: An Actigraphy-Based Assessment of Dogs' Impacts on Women's Nighttime Movements.

作者信息

Hoffman Christy L, Browne Matthew, Smith Bradley P

机构信息

Department of Animal Behavior, Ecology, and Conservation, Canisius College, Buffalo 14208 NY, USA.

School of Health, Medical and Applied Sciences, Central Queensland University, Bundaberg 4670, Australia.

出版信息

Animals (Basel). 2020 Feb 11;10(2):278. doi: 10.3390/ani10020278.

Abstract

Humans regularly enter into co-sleeping arrangements with human and non-human partners. Studies of adults who co-sleep report that co-sleeping can impact sleep quality, particularly for women. Although dog owners often choose to bedshare with their dogs, we know relatively little about the nature of these relationships, nor the extent to which co-sleeping might interfere with sleep quality or quantity. In an effort to rectify this, we selected a sample of 12 adult female human ( = 50.8 years) and dog dyads, and monitored their activity using actigraphy. We collected movement data in one-minute epochs for each sleep period for an average of 10 nights per participant. This resulted in 124 nights of data, covering 54,533 observations ( = 7.3 hours per night). In addition, we collected subjective sleep diary data from human participants. We found a significant positive relationship between human and dog movement over sleep periods, with dogs influencing human movement more than humans influenced dog movement. Dog movement accompanied approximately 50% of human movement observations, and dog movement tripled the likelihood of the human transitioning from a non-moving state to a moving state. Nevertheless, humans rarely reported that their dog disrupted their sleep. We encourage the continued exploration of human-animal co-sleeping in all its facets and provide recommendations for future research in this area.

摘要

人类经常与人类及非人类伙伴同睡。对同睡成年人的研究报告称,同睡会影响睡眠质量,对女性影响尤甚。尽管狗主人常选择与狗同床,但我们对这些关系的本质以及同睡对睡眠质量或时长的干扰程度了解相对较少。为纠正这一情况,我们选取了12对成年女性人类(平均年龄50.8岁)与狗的组合样本,并用活动记录仪监测其活动。我们在每个睡眠时段以一分钟为间隔收集运动数据,每位参与者平均记录10个晚上。这产生了124晚的数据,涵盖54533次观测(每晚平均7.3小时)。此外,我们还收集了人类参与者的主观睡眠日记数据。我们发现,在睡眠时段,人类与狗的运动之间存在显著的正相关关系,狗对人类运动的影响大于人类对狗运动的影响。约50%的人类运动观测有狗的运动相伴,狗的运动使人类从不运动状态转变为运动状态的可能性增加了两倍。然而,人类很少报告他们的狗扰乱了他们的睡眠。我们鼓励继续全面探索人类与动物同睡的情况,并为该领域未来的研究提供建议。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/2d8f/7070703/b76a24d50355/animals-10-00278-g001.jpg

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