Daily Relations Between Stress and Electroencephalography-Assessed Sleep: A 15-Day Intensive Longitudinal Design With Ecological Momentary Assessments

Author:

Yap Yang1ORCID,Tung Natasha Yan Chi1,Collins Jorja2ORCID,Phillips Andrew1ORCID,Bei Bei1ORCID,Wiley Joshua F1

Affiliation:

1. School of Psychological Sciences and Turner Institute for Brain and Mental Health, Monash University , Melbourne , Australia

2. Department of Nutrition, Dietetics and Food, Monash University , Melbourne, VIC , Australia

Abstract

Abstract Background Recent studies have found bi-directional relations between stress and sleep. However, few studies have examined the daily associations between stress and electroencephalography (EEG) measured sleep. Purpose This study examined the temporal associations between repeated ecological momentary assessments of stress and EEG-estimated sleep. Methods Ninety-eight international or interstate undergraduate students (Mage = 20.54 ± 1.64, 76.5% female, 84.7% Asian) reported their stress levels four times daily at morning awakening, afternoon, evening, and pre-bedtime across 15 consecutive days (>4,000 total observations). Next-day stress was coded as an average of morning, afternoon, and evening stress. Z-Machine Insight+ recorded over 1,000 nights EEG total sleep time (TST), sleep onset latency, wake after sleep onset, sleep efficiency (SE), slow-wave sleep (SWS), and rapid eye movement (REM) sleep duration. Multilevel models, adjusted for covariates (i.e., sociodemographic, health factors, and daily covariates) and lagged outcomes, tested the daily within- and between-level stress-sleep associations. Results After adjusting for covariates, within-person shorter TST (b = −0.11 [−0.21, −0.01], p = .04), lower SE (b = −0.02 [−0.03, 0.00], p = .04), less SWS (b = −0.38 [−0.66, −0.10], p = .008), and less REM sleep (b = −0.32 [−0.53, −0.10], p = .004) predicted higher next-day stress. Pre-bedtime stress did not predict same-night sleep. No significant results emerged at the between-person level. Conclusions These findings demonstrate that poor or short sleep, measured by EEG, is predictive of higher next-day stress. Results for sleep architecture support the role of SWS and REM sleep in regulating the perception of stress. Given that only within-person effects were significant, these findings highlight the importance of examining night-to-night fluctuations in sleep affecting next-day stress and its impact on daytime functioning.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,General Psychology

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