Affiliation:
1. Department of Computer Science and Engineering, University of Notre Dame , Notre Dame, IN , USA
2. Lucy Family Institute for Data and Society, University of Notre Dame , Notre Dame, IN , USA
3. StataCorp LLC , College Station, TX , USA
Abstract
Abstract
Study Objectives
Snoozing was defined as using multiple alarms to accomplish waking, and considered as a method of sleep inertia reduction that utilizes the stress system. Surveys measured snoozing behavior including who, when, how, and why snoozing occurs. In addition, the physiological effects of snoozing on sleep were examined via wearable sleep staging and heart rate (HR) activity, both over a long time scale, and on the days that it occurs. We aimed to establish snoozing as a construct in need of additional study.
Methods
A novel survey examined snoozing prevalence, how snoozing was accomplished, and explored possible contributors and motivators of snoozing behavior in 450 participants. Trait- and day-level surveys were combined with wearable data to determine if snoozers sleep differently than nonsnoozers, and how snoozers and nonsnoozers differ in other areas, such as personality.
Results
57% of participants snoozed. Being female, younger, having fewer steps, having lower conscientiousness, having more disturbed sleep, and being a more evening chronotype increased the likelihood of being a snoozer. Snoozers had elevated resting HR and showed lighter sleep before waking. Snoozers did not sleep less than nonsnoozers nor did they feel more sleepiness or nap more often.
Conclusions
Snoozing is a common behavior associated with changes in sleep physiology before waking, both in a trait- and state-dependent manner, and is influenced by demographic and behavioral traits. Additional research is needed, especially in detailing the physiology of snoozing, its impact on health, and its interactions with observational studies of sleep.
Funder
Office of the Director of National Intelligence
Intelligence Advanced Research Projects Activity
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Subject
Physiology (medical),Neurology (clinical)
Reference96 articles.
1. Lucid dreaming frequency and alarm clock snooze button use;Smith;Dreaming.,2015
2. Why snoozing your alarm could be damaging your health Is it time to start practising getting out of bed immediately?;Harvey-Jenner;Cosmopolitan.,2019
3. A sleep expert told us why hitting the snooze button is a terrible idea;Orwig;Business insider,2016
Cited by
5 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献