Balch John, Raider Rachel, Reed Chanel, McNamara Patrick
Department of Psychology, National University, San Diego, California, USA.
Center for Mind and Culture, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
J Sleep Res. 2024 Nov 26:e14417. doi: 10.1111/jsr.14417.
We collected measures of sleep architecture and nightmares from participants (N = 61) wearing the DREEM 3 headband across 2 weeks of data collection to test the hypothesis that there are bidirectional links between insomnia (measured as sleep disturbance) and nightmare events. Nightmares were predicted by increased sleep disturbance the night before the nightmare, but not on the same night or 2 nights before. We also found that nightmare occurrences did not predict increased sleep disturbance on the same night or the following 2 nights, rather nightmares predicted increased sleep disturbance at the between-subjects level only. We suggest that nightmares are associated with an N3 sleep rebound on the night of the nightmare following a night of sleep disturbance.
我们收集了61名参与者佩戴DREEM 3头带在两周数据收集期间的睡眠结构和噩梦测量数据,以检验失眠(以睡眠障碍衡量)与噩梦事件之间存在双向联系的假设。噩梦可由噩梦前一晚睡眠障碍的增加来预测,但不是在同一晚或前两晚。我们还发现,噩梦的发生并不能预测同一晚或接下来两晚睡眠障碍的增加,而是噩梦仅在个体间水平上预测睡眠障碍的增加。我们认为,在经历了一晚睡眠障碍后,噩梦与噩梦当晚的N3睡眠反弹有关。