Emotion regulation deficits are a hallmark of adolescent depression, and sleep greatly impacts emotion regulation. Initial data indicate acute mood benefits of slow-wave sleep deprivation (SWSD) in depressed adults, but it is unclear whether this may occur through improvement in emotion regulation. In addition, this has not been tested experimentally in adolescent depression. In this pilot study, we tested the effect of SWSD on emotion regulation in adolescents with elevated depressive symptoms. Fifteen adolescents (mean age [SD] = 17.47 [1.55] years, 12 female) completed three consecutive nights of polysomnographic sleep recording: Baseline, SWSD, and Recovery. Auditory stimulation (sounds of varying pitch, duration, and volume) suppressed slow-wave sleep (SWS) during SWSD. After Baseline and SWSD nights, the Emotional Go/No-Go task was administered the next day as a behavioural assessment of cognitive control, emotion discrimination, and emotion regulation outcomes. False Discovery Rate was used to account for multiple comparison correction. We found that, at Baseline, longer SWS duration was associated with poorer emotion discrimination (β = -0.44, p = 0.012, Q = 0.036). There was no association between other sleep stages and emotion regulation. While Emotional Go/No-Go outcomes did not significantly differ between Baseline and SWSD nights, greater attenuation in SWS significantly correlated with improvement in cognitive control (β = 0.61, p = 0.021, Q = 0.038), emotion discrimination (β = -0.44, p = 0.025, Q = 0.038), and emotion regulation (β = 0.62, p = 0.049, Q = 0.049) between nights. Findings from this pilot study tie elevated SWS to impaired emotion regulation in adolescents with depressive symptoms and suggest that targeted deprivation of SWS may improve emotion regulation in depressed adolescents with elevated SWS.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jsr.70038 | DOI Listing |
Dev Psychopathol
March 2025
Graduate School of Applied and Professional Psychology, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ, USA.
Difficulty with emotion regulation is a transdiagnostic problem associated with a variety of psychological disorders. The biosocial model suggests that early biological vulnerability, including impulsivity, may potentiate across development by transacting with environmental risk factors leading to the development of emotional dysregulation. During transition from late childhood to early adolescence, family may be a prominent source of environmental influences.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPsychol Med
March 2025
Orygen, Parkville, VC, Australia.
Background: To improve early intervention and personalise treatment for individuals early on the psychosis continuum, a greater understanding of symptom dynamics is required. We address this by identifying and evaluating the movement between empirically derived attenuated psychotic symptomatic substates-clusters of symptoms that occur within individuals over time.
Methods: Data came from a 90-day daily diary study evaluating attenuated psychotic and affective symptoms.
Front Psychol
February 2025
Department of Digital Health Research, Division of Medicine, Oslo University Hospital, Oslo, Norway.
Background: Psychosocial pain self-management interventions can be of support for people living with chronic pain. Since psychosocial support is not always accessible, digital health interventions may increase outreach of these types of evidence-based interventions.
Objectives: To explore participants' experiences from 12-month access to the digital pain self-management program EPIO, particularly in terms of any behavioral and/or psychological changes experienced.
Front Integr Neurosci
February 2025
Shanghai Sipo Polytechnic, Shanghai, China.
NaiKan Therapy, a method of self-reflection and introspection, has garnered considerable interest for its psychological benefits. However, its physiological impacts, particularly on hormonal regulation, remain underexplored. In this study, we aimed to investigate the effects of NaiKan Therapy on salivary oxytocin and cortisol release, shedding light on the psychophysiological mechanisms underlying this introspective practice.
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