4.5 Article

Sleep quality is associated with emotion experience and adaptive regulation of positive emotion: An experience sampling study

期刊

JOURNAL OF SLEEP RESEARCH
卷 31, 期 4, 页码 -

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jsr.13533

关键词

ecological momentary assessment; emotion regulation; negative emotion; positive emotion; sleep

资金

  1. TrygFonden Charitable Foundation [117642]
  2. Helsefonden [32062]
  3. National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Biomedical Research Centre at South London
  4. Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust
  5. King's College London
  6. Psychology and Systems Sciences Divisional Support Fund

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Poor sleep quality is significantly associated with increased intensity and duration of positive emotion, and decreased intensity of negative emotion in young adults. There were no statistically significant associations between sleep duration and emotion intensity or duration. The findings highlight the importance of examining both positive and negative emotions, and emotion regulation in understanding the links between sleep and mood.
Poor sleep patterns have been strongly linked to disrupted emotional experiences. Emotion regulation, defined as the capacity to manage one's own emotional responses, comprises strategies to increase, maintain, or decrease the intensity, duration, and trajectory of positive and negative emotions. Poor sleep has been identified as a risk factor for emotional dysregulation, but most of the focus has been on negative emotion regulation. We therefore asked whether natural variations in sleep are associated with the experience and regulation of both positive and negative emotion. Young adults, aged between 18-24 years (N = 101), completed 7 days of ecological momentary assessments using a smartphone application. Duration and quality of the previous night's sleep was reported each morning. Levels of positive and negative emotions, and strategies used to regulate emotions, were measured at pseudorandom timepoints four times a day. Multilevel modelling indicated that higher self-reported sleep quality was significantly associated with increased intensity and duration of positive emotion, and decreased intensity of negative emotion. There were no statistically significant associations between sleep duration and emotion intensity or duration. Sleep quality, and not sleep duration, was also associated with the reported use of positive emotion regulation strategies. For negative emotion regulation strategy use, we found no associations with sleep quality or duration. Naturally occurring fluctuations in daily sleep quality may be important for the experience and regulation of positive emotion in young adults. These findings emphasise the need to examine both positive and negative emotion, and emotion regulation to understand the links between sleep and mood.

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