4.3 Article

Bidirectional Links Between Social Rejection and Sleep

Journal

PSYCHOSOMATIC MEDICINE
Volume 81, Issue 8, Pages 739-748

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1097/PSY.0000000000000669

Keywords

affect; physiology; rumination; social rejection; sleep; BMI = body mass index; HRV = heart rate variability; IBI = interbeat interval; PSQI = Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index; RSA = respiratory sinus arrhythmia; SOL = sleep onset latency

Funding

  1. Greater Good Science Center
  2. J. Christian Gillin M.D. Research Grant from the Sleep Research Society Foundation
  3. Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Health and Society Scholars Program

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Objective This set of studies examines the bidirectional links between social rejection and poor sleep, a ubiquitous and increasingly problematic health behavior. Methods In study 1, a multiday field experiment, 43 participants completed a neutral task just before sleep on night 1 and a social rejection task on night 2. Objective and subjective sleep, postrejection affect, and physiological responses were measured. In study 2, 338 participants reported typical sleep quality before coming to the laboratory where they received social rejection or social acceptance feedback from a stranger. Physiological and affective responses were measured throughout the session. Results In study 1, after social rejection, participants took longer going to bed (M [SD] = 38.06 [48.56] versus 11.18 [15.52], t(42) = 3.86, p < .001) and had shorter sleep durations (6:46 [1:27] versus 7:19 [1:38], t(41) = 2.92, p = .006) compared with the baseline night. Trait rumination moderated these effects, with high ruminators taking the longest to go to bed postrejection (t(38) = 2.90, p = .006). In both studies, there was (inconsistent) evidence that sleep influences reactions to rejection: some sleep measures predicted physiological reactivity during the rejection task in study 1 and greater negative affect after social rejection in study 2. Conclusions These studies provide evidence that social rejection may affect sleep outcomes, particularly for trait ruminators, and poor sleep in turn may exacerbate affective responses to social rejection. Given the mixed findings, small sample size, and no active control condition, more work is needed to confirm and build on these findings.

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