Predictors of nightly subjective-objective sleep discrepancy in poor sleepers over a seven-day period

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Abstract

This study sought to examine predictors of subjective/objective sleep discrepancy in poor sleepers. Forty-two individuals with insomnia symptoms (mean age = 36.2 years, 81% female) were recruited to take part in a prospective study which combined seven days of actigraphy with daily assessment of sleep perceptions, self-reported arousal, sleep effort, and mood upon awakening. A high level of intra-individual variability in measures of sleep discrepancy was observed. Multilevel modelling revealed that higher levels of pre-sleep cognitive activity and lower mood upon awakening were significantly and independently predictive of the underestimation of total sleep time. Greater levels of sleep effort predicted overestimation of sleep onset latency. These results indicate that psychophysiological variables are related to subjective/objective sleep discrepancy and may be important therapeutic targets in the management of insomnia.

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Herbert, V., Pratt, D., Emsley, R., & Kyle, S. D. (2017). Predictors of nightly subjective-objective sleep discrepancy in poor sleepers over a seven-day period. Brain Sciences, 7(3). https://doi.org/10.3390/brainsci7030029

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