Sleep: A Pathway Linking Personality to Mortality Risk.

J Res Pers

West Virginia University, 1124 Life Sciences Building, Morgantown, West Virgina, 26506-6040 United States.

Published: August 2019

Personality and sleep predict longevity; however, no investigation has tested whether sleep mediates this association. Thus, we tested this effect across a 20-year follow-up (N = 3,759) in the Midlife Development in the United States cohort (baseline = 47.15) using proportional hazards in a structural equation modeling framework. Lower conscientiousness predicted increased death risk via the direct, indirect, and total effect of quadratic sleep duration. Although there were no other direct personality-mortality effects, higher neuroticism and agreeableness and lower conscientiousness predicted increased death risk via the joint indirect effects of quadratic sleep duration and higher daytime dysfunction. Lower extraversion predicted increased mortality risk via the indirect effect of daytime dysfunction. Our findings have implications for personality-based health interventions.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6655533PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jrp.2019.04.007DOI Listing

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