Department of Psychology, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona, USA.
Department of Psychology, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona, USA.
Sleep Health. 2022 Apr;8(2):208-215. doi: 10.1016/j.sleh.2021.12.006. Epub 2022 Feb 21.
This study (1) examined pubertal development in relation to actigraphy-assessed sleep in twin children, and tested whether associations differed by child race and gender, (2) modeled genetic and environmental influences on pubertal development and sleep indicators, and (3) examined genetic and environmental influences on the covariation of puberty and sleep.
The classic twin design was used to examine genetic and environmental contributions to puberty and sleep and their associations.
Data were collected from community-dwelling urban and rural families of twins in the southwestern U.S.
The racially and socioeconomically diverse sample included 596 twin children (M = 8.41, SD = 0.69; 51.7% female; 66.3% white; 33.7% Hispanic; 170 monozygotic, 236 same-sex dizygotic, 188 opposite-sex dizygotic).
Pubertal development was assessed via parent report. Children wore actigraph watches for 7 nights (M = 6.81, SD = 0.67) to capture sleep duration, efficiency, midpoint, onset latency, and duration variability.
In contrast to extant literature with older youth, more advanced pubertal development was associated with longer sleep durations in Hispanic and white girls and higher sleep efficiency in white girls, though Hispanic girls demonstrated later sleep midpoints. Pubertal development was moderately heritable and there was a genetic influence on the covariance between puberty and sleep indicators.
This was the first study to examine the genetic and environmental influences on the covariation between puberty and sleep, and found genetic underpinnings between pubertal development and actigraphy-assessed sleep duration and efficiency, though sleep and puberty were almost entirely independent in twins at this age.
本研究(1)考察了双胞胎儿童的青春期发育与基于活动记录仪的睡眠之间的关系,并检验了这些关联是否因儿童的种族和性别而有所不同;(2)构建了关于青春期发育和睡眠指标的遗传和环境影响模型;(3)检验了青春期和睡眠的共变的遗传和环境影响。
经典的双胞胎设计被用于检验遗传和环境对青春期和睡眠的贡献及其关联。
数据来自美国西南部的城市和农村社区双胞胎家庭。
该样本具有种族和社会经济多样性,包括 596 名双胞胎儿童(M=8.41,SD=0.69;51.7%为女性;66.3%为白人;33.7%为西班牙裔;170 对同卵双胞胎,236 对同性异卵双胞胎,188 对异性异卵双胞胎)。
通过家长报告评估青春期发育。儿童佩戴活动记录仪 7 晚(M=6.81,SD=0.67)以记录睡眠时长、效率、中点、潜伏期和时长变异性。
与现有的关于年长青少年的文献相反,在西班牙裔和白人女孩中,更先进的青春期发育与更长的睡眠时间有关,而在白人女孩中,更高的睡眠效率与更先进的青春期发育有关,尽管西班牙裔女孩的睡眠中点较晚。青春期发育具有中等程度的遗传性,并且青春期和睡眠指标之间的协方差存在遗传影响。
这是第一项研究遗传和环境因素对青春期和睡眠共变的影响的研究,发现青春期发育和基于活动记录仪的睡眠时长和效率之间存在遗传基础,但在这个年龄段的双胞胎中,睡眠和青春期几乎完全独立。