College of Health Sciences, University of Delaware, Newark, DE, USA.
Rory Meyers College of Nursing, New York University, New York, NY, USA.
Sleep. 2023 Nov 8;46(11). doi: 10.1093/sleep/zsad123.
This study aimed to quantify the temporal associations between nightly sleep quantity and timing with daytime eating behavior and activity levels in free-living (i.e. non-experimental) settings.
Generally healthy young adults (N = 63; 28.9 ± 7.1 years) completed concurrent sleep (wrist actigraphy), eating (photo-assisted diet records), and activity (waist actigraphy) assessments over 14 days. Multilevel models quantified the associations between nightly sleep (total sleep time, timing of sleep and wake onset) with next-day eating behavior (diet quality, caloric intake, timing of eating onset/offset, eating window duration) and activity levels (total physical activity, sedentary time). Associations in the reverse direction (i.e. eating and activity predicting sleep) were explored. Models adjusted for demographic and behavioral confounders and accounted for multiple testing.
At within- and between-subject levels, nights with greater-than-average total sleep time predicted a shorter eating window the next day (all p ≤ 0.002). Later-than-average sleep and wake timing predicted within- and between-subject delays in next-day eating onset and offset, and between-subject reductions in diet quality and caloric intake (all p ≤ 0.008). At within- and between-subject levels, total sleep time was bidirectionally, inversely associated with sedentary time (all p < 0.001), while later-than-average sleep and wake timing predicted lower next-day physical activity (all p ≤ 0.008).
These data underscore the complex interrelatedness between sleep, eating behavior, and activity levels in free-living settings. Findings also suggest that sleep exerts a greater influence on next-day behavior, rather than vice versa. While testing in more diverse samples is needed, these data have potential to enhance health behavior interventions and maximize health outcomes.
本研究旨在量化夜间睡眠时间和时间与自由生活(即非实验)环境中白天进食行为和活动水平之间的时间关联。
一般健康的年轻成年人(N=63;28.9±7.1 岁)在 14 天内同时完成睡眠(腕部动作描记法)、进食(照片辅助饮食记录)和活动(腰部动作描记法)评估。多层次模型量化了夜间睡眠(总睡眠时间、睡眠和醒来开始时间)与次日进食行为(饮食质量、热量摄入、进食开始/结束时间、进食窗口持续时间)和活动水平(总体力活动、久坐时间)之间的关联。探索了相反方向的关联(即进食和活动预测睡眠)。模型调整了人口统计学和行为混杂因素,并考虑了多次测试。
在个体内和个体间水平上,睡眠时间超过平均水平的夜晚预示着次日进食窗口较短(所有 p≤0.002)。睡眠和醒来时间晚于平均水平预示着次日进食开始和结束的个体内和个体间延迟,以及个体间饮食质量和热量摄入的降低(所有 p≤0.008)。在个体内和个体间水平上,总睡眠时间与久坐时间呈双向、负相关(所有 p<0.001),而睡眠和醒来时间晚于平均水平预示着次日体力活动较低(所有 p≤0.008)。
这些数据强调了自由生活环境中睡眠、进食行为和活动水平之间的复杂相互关系。研究结果还表明,睡眠对次日行为的影响更大,而不是相反。虽然需要在更多样化的样本中进行测试,但这些数据有可能增强健康行为干预措施并最大限度地提高健康结果。