4.6 Article

The effect of sleep deprivation and restriction on mood, emotion, and emotion regulation: three meta-analyses in one

Journal

SLEEP
Volume 44, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/sleep/zsaa289

Keywords

meta-analysis; sleep; mood; emotion; emotion regulation

Funding

  1. National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases of the National Institutes of Health [F31DK122636, R01DK125651, R01DK116693]

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The study conducted three meta-analyses to examine the impact of sleep restriction and sleep deprivation on mood, emotion, and emotion regulation. Results showed a moderate positive effect of sleep loss on negative mood, a large negative effect on positive mood, and a small negative effect on adaptive emotion regulation.
Study Objectives: New theory and measurement approaches have facilitated nuanced investigation of how sleep loss impacts dimensions of affective functioning. To provide a quantitative summary of this literature, three conceptually related meta-analyses examined the effect of sleep restriction and sleep deprivation on mood, emotion, and emotion regulation across the lifespan (i.e. from early childhood to late adulthood). Methods: A total of 241 effect sizes from 64 studies were selected for inclusion, and multilevel meta-analytic techniques were used when applicable. Results: There was a moderate, positive effect of sleep loss on negative mood (g = 0.45), which was stronger for studies with younger samples, as well as a large, negative effect of sleep loss on positive mood (g = -0.94). For negative mood only, studies that used total sleep deprivation had larger effect sizes than studies that restricted sleep. After correcting for publication bias, a modest but significant negative effect for sleep loss on emotion (g = -0.11) was found; the valence of emotional stimuli did not change the direction of this effect, and type of sleep manipulation was also not a significant moderator. Finally, sleep restriction had a small, negative effect on adaptive emotion regulation (g = -0.32), but no significant impact on maladaptive emotion regulation (g = 0.14); all studies on adaptive emotion regulation were conducted with youth samples. Conclusions: Sleep loss compromises optimal affective functioning, though the magnitude of effects varies across components. Findings underscore the importance of sleep for healthy affective outcomes.

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