The daily reciprocal associations between electroencephalography measured sleep and affect

Author:

Boon Merel Elise1ORCID,Esfahani Mahdad Jafarzadeh2,Vink Jacqueline M.1,Geurts Sabine A. E.1,van Hooff Madelon L. M.3

Affiliation:

1. Behavioral Science Institute, Radboud University Nijmegen The Netherlands

2. Donders Institute for Brain, Behaviour and Cognition, Radboud University Medical Center Nijmegen The Netherlands

3. Faculty of Psychology, Open Universiteit Heerlen The Netherlands

Abstract

SummarySelf‐report studies show that sleep and positive and negative affect are closely and bidirectionally linked. However, studies assessing sleep objectively yield more inconsistent results. This study assessed the reciprocal, daily relationship between sleep as measured with electroencephalography (EEG) and affect (measured in the evening) in a natural setting. We assessed sleep both on the macrolevel (i.e., rapid eye movement [REM] sleep and slow‐wave sleep [SWS] duration) and on the microlevel (i.e., REM sleep fragmentation). In this study, 33 participants (i.e., healthy college students, mean [standard deviation] age 21.55 [3.73] years, 67% female) were followed for 2 weeks. Each participant wore an EEG headband for 15 nights and had polysomnography during 3 of the 15 nights providing 72 analysable nights of polysomnography and 271 analysable nights with the EEG headband. Every evening participants reported their momentary negative and positive affect. We examined the relationship between pre‐sleep affect and the sleep variables, as well as the reverse relationship, with sleep variables predicting evening affect the next day. We detected that higher negative affect in the evening was related to more fragmented REM sleep. However, this result was only found with polysomnography and not with the EEG headband. No significant associations were found between affect and time spent in REM sleep and SWS. Overall, no support was found for the reciprocal association between negative and positive affect and EEG measured sleep. Only limited support was found for an association in one direction (i.e., evening negative affect was associated with more REM sleep fragmentation at night).

Publisher

Wiley

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