# Associations Between Sleep, Appetite, and Food Reward over 6 Months in Black Emerging Adults—Findings from the Sleep, Health Outcomes and Body Weight (SHOW) Pilot Study

**Authors:** Hannah R. Koch, Jesse N. L. Sims, Stephanie Pickett, Graham Finlayson, Laurie Wideman, Jessica McNeil

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/nu17142305 · 2025-07-13

## TL;DR

This study found that better sleep in young Black adults is linked to reduced appetite and less desire for sweet foods over six months.

## Contribution

The study is the first to examine home-based sleep, appetite, and food reward associations in Black emerging adults.

## Key findings

- Fasting fullness scores decreased over 6 months despite weight and waist gain.
- Longer sleep duration was linked to lower fasting desire to eat.
- Better sleep efficiency was associated with reduced liking for sweet foods.

## Abstract

Background/Objectives: Imposed sleep restriction leads to increased feelings of appetite and hedonic eating behaviors (or food rewards). No study to date has assessed home-based measures of sleep with appetite and food rewards exclusively in Black emerging adults (ages 18–28 years), despite higher risks of short sleep and obesity in this population. We examined associations between 6-month changes in sleep with changes in appetite and food reward in Black emerging adults. Methods: Fifteen Black emerging adults (12 females; age, 21 ± 2.5 years; body mass index, 25.7 ± 4.5 kg/m2; body fat, 25.8 ± 11.9%) completed two identical 7-day measurement bursts at baseline and 6 months. Sleep (duration, efficiency, and architecture) was captured via 7 days of actigraphy and 2 nights of in-home polysomnography. During a laboratory visit, participants completed appetite measures (desire to eat, hunger, fullness, and prospective food consumption) via visual analog scales before and for 3 h following standard breakfast intake. The food reward for the fat and sweet categories of food was measured before lunch with the Leeds Food Preference Questionnaire. Results: Fasting fullness scores decreased from baseline to 6 months (−8.9 mm, p < 0.01) despite increases in body weight (2.6 kg, p < 0.01) and waist circumference (2.4 cm, p = 0.03). Increases in actigraph-measured sleep duration were associated with decreases in fasting desire to eat (r = −0.58, p = 0.04). Increases in actigraph-measured sleep efficiency were also associated with decreases in explicit liking for sweet foods (r = −0.60, p = 0.03). Conclusions: Our findings suggest that improvements in sleep duration and sleep efficiency may lead to decreased feelings of appetite and food reward in Black emerging adults.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** sleep restriction (MESH:D002313), short sleep (MESH:D012893), obesity (MESH:D009765)

## Figures

1 figure with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12299533/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12299533