Nightly Sleep Predicts Next-Morning Expectations for Stress and Positive Experiences.

Psychosom Med

From the Department of Psychology (Wen, DeLongis, Sin), The University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada; Department of Developmental Psychology (Klaiber), Tilburg University, Tilburg, the Netherlands; Department of Psychology (Leger), The University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky; Department of Psychological & Brain Sciences (Hill), Washington University in St. Louis, Missouri; Department of Medical Social Sciences (Pfund), Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois; and Department of Psychology, University of North Texas (Slavish), Denton, Texas.

Published: May 2024

Objective: Abundant research has linked nightly sleep as an antecedent of daily psychosocial experiences; however, less is known about sleep's influence on daily expectations of these experiences. Therefore, this research examined the day-to-day associations of sleep quality, duration, and efficiency with next-day expectations for stress(ors) and positive experiences, as well as whether these expectations were related to end-of-day reports of physical symptoms.

Methods: In Study 1, U.S. adults ( n = 354; ages 19 to 74) completed twice-daily diaries for 10 weekdays about sleep, expectations for encountering daily stressors and positive events, and physical symptoms. In Study 2, adults in Canada ( n = 246; ages 25 to 87) wore a sleep watch for 14 consecutive days and completed mobile surveys 5×/day about sleep, stressfulness and pleasantness expectations, and physical symptoms.

Results: Multilevel models indicated that self-reported sleep quality and duration, but not efficiency, were associated with lower next-day expectations for stressors (Study 1) and stressfulness (Study 2). Self-reported sleep quality (Study 1) and all sleep indices (Study 2) predicted greater next-day expectations for positive events and pleasantness, respectively. For actigraphy-assessed sleep (Study 2), only longer-than-usual actigraphic sleep duration was associated with lower stressfulness expectations, whereas both sleep duration and efficiency were positively linked with daily pleasantness expectations. Only pleasantness expectations (Study 2)-but not daily stressfulness and event expectations (Study 1)-predicted end-of-day physical symptoms.

Conclusion: Findings suggest the importance of sleep on expectations of next-day stress and positive experiences, of which may have implications for daily physical health.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/PSY.0000000000001303DOI Listing

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