Leveraging Technology to Disentangle the Relationship Between Sleep and Cognition in Daily Life
Christopher Kaufmann, Todd Manini

TL;DR
This paper explores how new technologies like wearables and smartphones can help understand the daily relationship between sleep and cognitive function in real-world settings.
Contribution
The paper introduces novel methods using modern wearables and smartphones to measure sleep and cognition in daily life, offering insights into their bidirectional relationship.
Findings
Modern wearables can capture sleep staging and nighttime breathing rate, which may influence daily cognition.
Smartphones enable cognitive assessments in everyday settings, expanding research beyond traditional lab environments.
Technological tools offer new ways to study the relationship between sleep and neurodegeneration in community settings.
Abstract
There is strong interest in how poor sleep impacts cognition and neurodegenerative diseases like Alzheimer’s disease. Research across basic science, clinical, and epidemiological studies highlight a strong relationship between the two; however, questions remain about causality due to concerns about reverse causation. Despite the rigor of prior studies, the bidirectional nature of this relationship necessitates a nuanced understanding on a day-to-day and night-to-night basis within community settings. Recent technological advances, such as wearables and smartphones, offer new avenues to explore these daily and weekly dynamics. While accelerometers have been used to measure sleep for nearly four decades, modern wearables can now provide valuable insights, including sleep staging and nighttime breathing rate, factors which may significantly impact daily cognition. Traditionally, cognitive…
Genes, proteins, chemicals, diseases, species, mutations and cell lines named across the full text — each resolved to its canonical identifier and authoritative record.
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Taxonomy
TopicsSleep and related disorders · Sleep and Work-Related Fatigue · Sleep and Wakefulness Research
