Sleep and Chronobiology Laboratory, Department of Integrative Physiology, University of Colorado Boulder, Boulder, CO, USA.
Colorado Sleep Institute, Boulder, CO, USA.
J Biol Rhythms. 2024 Feb;39(1):35-48. doi: 10.1177/07487304231188204. Epub 2023 Aug 4.
Prior research indicates that sleep restriction, sleep deprivation, and circadian misalignment diminish positive affect, whereas effects on negative affect are inconsistent. One potential factor that may influence an individual's affective response to sleep restriction, sleep deprivation, and circadian misalignment is chronotype. Later chronotypes generally report higher negative affect and lower positive affect under typical sleep conditions; however, there is mixed evidence for an influence of chronotype on affective responses to sleep restriction and sleep deprivation. The present study examined the effect of chronotype on positive and negative affect during sleep restriction and subsequent total sleep deprivation. Sixteen healthy adults (M = 28.2 years, SD = 11.6 years) were classified as earlier or later chronotypes using multiple chronotype definitions: morningness-eveningness (MEQ), mid-sleep on free days corrected (MSFsc), habitual mid-sleep timing, dim light melatonin onset (DLMO), and phase relationship between DLMO and bedtime. Participants completed a 10-day protocol with one night of sleep restriction and subsequent 28 h total sleep deprivation. Affect was assessed hourly during scheduled wakefulness with the Positive and Negative Affect Schedule (PANAS). Data were analyzed with mixed-model analyses of variance (ANOVAs). During sleep restriction and subsequent sleep deprivation, positive affect decreased and negative affect increased. Across all chronotype measures, relatively later chronotypes demonstrated vulnerability to increased negative affect during sleep loss. The influence of chronotype on positive affect during sleep loss varied by chronotype measure. These findings suggest later chronotypes are more vulnerable to affective impairments during sleep loss and circadian misalignment, even when late chronotype is not extreme.
先前的研究表明,睡眠限制、睡眠剥夺和昼夜节律紊乱会降低积极情绪,而对消极情绪的影响则不一致。一个可能影响个体对睡眠限制、睡眠剥夺和昼夜节律紊乱的情绪反应的因素是昼夜时型。一般来说,晚型昼夜时型在典型的睡眠条件下报告更高的消极情绪和更低的积极情绪;然而,昼夜时型对睡眠限制和睡眠剥夺的情绪反应的影响存在混合证据。本研究考察了昼夜时型对睡眠限制和随后的总睡眠剥夺期间积极和消极情绪的影响。16 名健康成年人(M=28.2 岁,SD=11.6 岁)使用多种昼夜时型定义(MEQ、自由日校正的中间睡眠时间(MSFsc)、习惯性中间睡眠时间、褪黑素开始时间(DLMO)和 DLMO 与就寝时间之间的相位关系)分为早型或晚型昼夜时型。参与者完成了一项 10 天的方案,包括一夜的睡眠限制和随后的 28 小时总睡眠剥夺。使用正性和负性情绪量表(PANAS)在预定清醒时间每小时评估一次情绪。使用混合模型方差分析(ANOVAs)分析数据。在睡眠限制和随后的睡眠剥夺期间,积极情绪下降,消极情绪增加。在所有的昼夜时型测量中,相对较晚的昼夜时型在睡眠剥夺期间表现出更容易出现消极情绪的倾向。昼夜时型对睡眠剥夺期间积极情绪的影响因昼夜时型测量而异。这些发现表明,即使晚型昼夜时型不极端,晚型昼夜时型在睡眠剥夺和昼夜节律紊乱期间更容易出现情绪障碍。