Examining the impact of total sleep duration on daily affect among short-sleeping adolescents: an experimental study
Avah Mousavi-Raad, Ariel Neikrug, Dean Beebe, Uma Rao, Jessica Borelli, Kate R Kuhlman

TL;DR
This study found that increasing sleep in short-sleeping teens led to higher morning positive emotions, but group differences in mood were not significant.
Contribution
The study experimentally tested sleep extension effects on daily affect in short-sleeping adolescents, revealing nuanced associations between sleep and mood.
Findings
Increased sleep duration was associated with higher morning positive affect in adolescents.
Longer sleep was linked to lower morning negative affect in a secondary analysis.
Higher average sleep duration correlated with lower evening positive affect unexpectedly.
Abstract
This study examined whether increasing sleep duration was associated with changes in daily affect, specifically, increases in positive affect (PA) and decreases in negative affect (NA), among short-sleeping adolescents. Healthy, short-sleeping adolescents (reporting <8 h sleep on school nights based on parent and adolescent screening questionnaires, n = 41, 14-17 years) participated in 1 week of baseline monitoring, then were randomized to either sleep extension (EXT; +90 min in bed; n = 21) or habitual sleep (HAB; n = 20) for 2 weeks. Both conditions established fixed bedtime and rise-time to reduce sleep variability. Sleep duration was assessed via wrist actigraphy. Participants completed the 22-item Profile of Mood States twice daily: soon after waking and at bedtime during the 3-week protocol. During the initial preintervention week, average nightly sleep duration was 6.42 h (SD =…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSleep and related disorders · Sleep and Work-Related Fatigue · Mental Health Research Topics
