Longitudinal actigraphy study on sleep patterns under reduced social restrictions in Japanese university students
Yuna Enomoto, Hiroko Kubo

TL;DR
This study used actigraphy to track how Japanese university students' sleep patterns changed during the pandemic when social restrictions were reduced.
Contribution
The study reveals individual variability in sleep adaptation to reduced social restrictions and links sleep changes to personality traits.
Findings
Sleep timing was delayed during the pandemic, with later bed-in and bed-out times.
Individuals with lower neuroticism and shorter baseline sleep duration had increased time in bed.
Subjective sleep feeling remained stable despite changes in sleep timing and efficiency.
Abstract
Sleep deprivation and irregular sleep patterns can adversely affect physical and mental health. The COVID-19 pandemic presented a naturalistic opportunity to examine how reduced social time restrictions influence sleep behavior. This study aimed to investigate both group-level and individual-level changes in sleep patterns among Japanese university students before and during the pandemic and to explore how individual characteristics may contribute to these changes. Twenty-two female university students wore waist-worn actigraphy devices for approximately 16 weeks in both 2019 and 2020. Objective sleep data were collected alongside questionnaire assessments of chronotype, personality traits, and subjective sleep feeling. In total, 4,432 valid days of actigraphy data were analyzed. Compared with the pre-pandemic year, sleep timing was delayed by approximately 20 min for bed-in time and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSleep and related disorders · Sleep and Wakefulness Research · Sleep and Work-Related Fatigue
