Enomoto Yuna, Kubo Hiroko
Cooperative Major in Human Centered Engineering, Graduate School of Humanities and Sciences, Nara Women's University, Kitauoyanishi-Machi, Nara, 630-8506, Japan.
Faculty of Engineering, Nara Women's University, Kitauoyanishi-Machi, Nara, 630-8506, Japan.
J Physiol Anthropol. 2025 Jun 10;44(1):17. doi: 10.1186/s40101-025-00397-4.
Sleep deprivation and irregular sleep patterns can adversely affect physical and mental health. The COVID-19 pandemic presented a naturalistic opportunity to examine how reduced social time restrictions influence sleep behavior. This study aimed to investigate both group-level and individual-level changes in sleep patterns among Japanese university students before and during the pandemic and to explore how individual characteristics may contribute to these changes.
Twenty-two female university students wore waist-worn actigraphy devices for approximately 16 weeks in both 2019 and 2020. Objective sleep data were collected alongside questionnaire assessments of chronotype, personality traits, and subjective sleep feeling.
In total, 4,432 valid days of actigraphy data were analyzed. Compared with the pre-pandemic year, sleep timing was delayed by approximately 20 min for bed-in time and 40 min for bed-out time in 2020. Time in bed (TIB) increased by about 20 min, while total sleep time (TST) remained largely unchanged. Sleep efficiency declined, but subjective sleep feeling remained stable. Individual-level analyses revealed substantial variability: 9 of 22 participants showed significant changes in TST, with both increases and decreases observed. Increased TIB was associated with later bed-out time, shorter baseline sleep duration, and lower neuroticism. A later bed-in time was associated with reduced TST.
These findings suggest that while social time restrictions can influence sleep timing and duration, the effects vary considerably across individuals. Earlier bedtimes may be more effective than simply extending TIB in promoting adequate sleep. Furthermore, individual characteristics such as personality traits may play a role in sleep adaptation under changing social contexts. Given the diversity of responses observed, both group- and individual-level perspectives are essential for understanding sleep behavior in real-world settings.
睡眠剥夺和不规律的睡眠模式会对身心健康产生不利影响。新冠疫情提供了一个自然的机会来研究社会时间限制的减少如何影响睡眠行为。本研究旨在调查日本大学生在疫情前和疫情期间睡眠模式在群体层面和个体层面的变化,并探讨个体特征如何促成这些变化。
2019年和2020年,22名女大学生佩戴了约16周的腰部活动记录仪。在收集客观睡眠数据的同时,通过问卷调查对昼夜节律类型、人格特质和主观睡眠感受进行评估。
总共分析了4432个有效日的活动记录仪数据。与疫情前一年相比,2020年上床睡觉时间推迟了约20分钟,起床时间推迟了40分钟。卧床时间(TIB)增加了约20分钟,而总睡眠时间(TST)基本保持不变。睡眠效率下降,但主观睡眠感受保持稳定。个体层面的分析显示出很大的变异性:22名参与者中有9人TST有显著变化,既有增加也有减少。TIB增加与起床时间晚、基线睡眠时间短和神经质得分低有关。上床睡觉时间晚与TST减少有关。
这些发现表明,虽然社会时间限制会影响睡眠时间和时长,但个体之间的影响差异很大。较早的就寝时间在促进充足睡眠方面可能比单纯延长TIB更有效。此外,人格特质等个体特征可能在不断变化的社会背景下的睡眠适应中发挥作用。鉴于观察到的反应具有多样性,群体层面和个体层面的观点对于理解现实世界中的睡眠行为都至关重要。