University of Massachusetts at Amherst, Amherst, Massachusetts, United States of America.
Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, Indiana, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2021 Jan 7;16(1):e0241188. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0241188. eCollection 2021.
There are well-known associations between stress, poor sleep, and cognitive deficits, but little is known about their interactive effects, which the present study explored in a sample of mothers of toddlers. Since certain types of cognitive decline start during the 20s and continue into later ages, we also explored whether mothers' age interacted with stress and sleep in the prediction of cognitive functioning. We hypothesized that poorer sleep [measured using one week of 24-hour wrist actigraphy data] and having more chronic stressors [e.g., life events, household chaos, work/family role conflict] would be linked with poorer cognitive performance [both executive function and standardized cognitive ability tasks], and that the interactive combination of poorer sleep and more stressors would account for the effect. We also explored whether this process operated differently for younger versus older women. In a socioeconomically and geographically diverse community sample of 227 women with toddler-age children [age, M = 32.73 yrs, SD = 5.15 yrs], poorer cognitive performance was predicted by greater activity during the sleep period, shorter sleep duration, and lower night-to-night consistency in sleep; it was not associated with higher levels of stress. The interactive effects hypothesis was supported for sleep activity [fragmented sleep] and sleep timing [when mothers went to bed]. The combination of more exposure to stressors and frequent night waking was particularly deleterious for older women's performance. For younger women, going to bed late was associated with poorer performance if they were experiencing high levels of stress; for those experiencing low levels of stress, going to bed late was associated with better performance.
压力、睡眠质量差和认知能力下降之间存在众所周知的关联,但对于它们的相互作用知之甚少,本研究在幼儿母亲样本中对此进行了探讨。由于某些类型的认知能力下降始于 20 多岁,并持续到老年,我们还探讨了母亲的年龄是否与压力和睡眠在认知功能预测中的相互作用。我们假设,较差的睡眠(通过一周的 24 小时腕部活动记录仪数据测量)和更多的慢性压力源(例如生活事件、家庭混乱、工作/家庭角色冲突)与较差的认知表现(执行功能和标准化认知能力任务)相关,较差的睡眠和更多压力源的交互组合将解释这种效果。我们还探讨了这一过程是否在年轻女性和年长女性中存在差异。在一个社会经济和地理多样化的社区样本中,有 227 名幼儿母亲(年龄,M = 32.73 岁,SD = 5.15 岁),睡眠期间的活动量增加、睡眠时间缩短和夜间睡眠一致性降低会预测认知表现较差;而与压力水平升高无关。睡眠活动(碎片化睡眠)和睡眠时间(母亲何时上床睡觉)的交互作用假设得到了支持。暴露于更多压力源和频繁夜间醒来的组合对年长女性的表现特别有害。对于年轻女性,如果她们经历高水平的压力,晚睡与较差的表现相关;对于经历低水平压力的女性,晚睡与更好的表现相关。