Effects of evening smartphone use on sleep and declarative memory consolidation in male adolescents and young adults

Author:

Höhn Christopher12ORCID,Hahn Michael A3,Gruber Georg4,Pletzer Belinda2,Cajochen Christian56ORCID,Hoedlmoser Kerstin12

Affiliation:

1. Laboratory for Sleep, Cognition and Consciousness Research, Department of Psychology, Paris Lodron University of Salzburg , 5020 Salzburg , Austria

2. Centre for Cognitive Neuroscience Salzburg (CCNS), Paris Lodron University of Salzburg , 5020 Salzburg , Austria

3. Hertie-Institute for Clinical Brain Research, University Medical Center Tübingen , 72076 Tübingen , Germany

4. The Siesta Group Schlafanalyse GmbH , 1210 Vienna , Austria

5. Centre for Chronobiology, Psychiatric Hospital of the University of Basel , 4002 Basel , Switzerland

6. Research Cluster Molecular and Cognitive Neuroscience (MCN), University of Basel , 4055 Basel , Switzerland

Abstract

Abstract Exposure to short-wavelength light before bedtime is known to disrupt nocturnal melatonin secretion and can impair subsequent sleep. However, while it has been demonstrated that older adults are less affected by short-wavelength light, there is limited research exploring differences between adolescents and young adults. Furthermore, it remains unclear whether the effects of evening short-wavelength light on sleep architecture extend to sleep-related processes, such as declarative memory consolidation. Here, we recorded polysomnography from 33 male adolescents (15.42 ± 0.97 years) and 35 male young adults (21.51 ± 2.06 years) in a within-subject design during three different nights to investigate the impact of reading for 90 min either on a smartphone with or without a blue-light filter or from a printed book. We measured subjective sleepiness, melatonin secretion, sleep physiology and sleep-dependent memory consolidation. While subjective sleepiness remained unaffected, we observed a significant melatonin attenuation effect in both age groups immediately after reading on the smartphone without a blue-light filter. Interestingly, adolescents fully recovered from the melatonin attenuation in the following 50 min before bedtime, whereas adults still, at bedtime, exhibited significantly reduced melatonin levels. Sleep-dependent memory consolidation and the coupling between sleep spindles and slow oscillations were not affected by short-wavelength light in both age groups. Nevertheless, adults showed a reduction in N3 sleep during the first night quarter. In summary, avoiding smartphone use in the last hour before bedtime is advisable for adolescents and young adults to prevent sleep disturbances. Our research empirically supports general sleep hygiene advice and can inform future recommendations regarding the use of smartphones and other screen-based devices before bedtime.

Funder

Imaging the Mind

Austrian Science Fund

Centre for Cognitive Neuroscience Salzburg

German Academic Exchange Service

German Federal Ministry of Education and Research

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Reference97 articles.

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