4.6 Article

Association between impulsivity and cognitive capacity decrease is mediated by smartphone addiction, academic procrastination, bedtime procrastination, sleep insufficiency and daytime fatigue among medical students: a path analysis

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BMC MEDICAL EDUCATION
卷 23, 期 1, 页码 -

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BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12909-023-04522-8

关键词

Impulsivity; Smartphone addiction; Academic; Bedtime; Procrastination; Sleep outcomes; Medical student

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Medical students' impulsivity, including attentional, non-planning, and motor impulsivity, directly affects their cognitive capacity decrease. Attentional impulsivity also indirectly affects cognitive capacity decrease through smartphone addiction, academic procrastination, bedtime procrastination, sleep insufficiency, and fatigue. Non-planning impulsivity indirectly affects cognitive capacity decrease through academic procrastination, bedtime procrastination, sleep insufficiency, and fatigue.
BackgroundMedical students are at high risk for sleep disturbance. One possible cause of their sleeping problem is impulsivity. We aim to investigate the possible mediators between medical students' impulsivity and sleep outcomes. Thus, we developed and investigated a model where the predictors were attentional, non-planning, and motor impulsivity subtraits. In the final model, subjective cognitive capacity decrease was the outcome variable. In light of previous findings, academic procrastination, smartphone addiction, and bedtime procrastination were considered important mediators as well as two variables of poor sleep, sleeping insufficiency, and daytime fatigue.MethodsMedical students (N = 211; age(M) = 22.15 years; age(SD) = 3.47 years; 71.6% women) were recruited to complete an online survey comprised of demographics (age, gender), self-administered scales (Abbreviated Impulsiveness Scale, Bedtime Procrastination Scale, Abbreviated Impulsiveness Scale, Academic Procrastination Scale-Short Form) and questions on tiredness, daily fatigue and subjective cognitive capacity decrease. Correlation and path analyses were implemented to examine hypothesized relationships between the variables.ResultsBoth attentional impulsivity (& beta; = 0.33, p < .001) and non-planning impulsivity (& beta; = -0.19, p < .01) had a direct relationship with cognitive capacity decrease. Attentional impulsivity was also associated with decreased cognitive capacity with a serial mediation effect via smartphone addiction, academic procrastination, bedtime procrastination, sleep insufficiency and fatigue (estimate = 0.017, p < .01). The indirect link between non-planning impulsivity and cognitive capacity decrease was mediated by academic procrastination, bedtime procrastination, sleep insufficiency and fatigue (estimate = 0.011, p < .01).ConclusionsInability to stay focused and plan tasks effectively (directly and indirectly) predicts poor sleep outcomes. This relationship is mediated by excessive smartphone use, academic procrastination, and bedtime procrastination. Our findings are relevant in light of self-regulatory learning, which is crucial in medical education. This is a recursive cycle of planning, emotion regulation, proper strategy selection and self-monitoring. Future interventions addressing attentional and non-planning impulsivity, problematic smartphone use, academic procrastination, and in turn, bedtime procrastination might make this routine more effective. In the conclusion section, practical implications of the results are discussed.

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