Investigation of bi-directional relations between pre-sleep electronic media use and sleep: A seven-day dairy study

IF 9 1区 心理学 Q1 PSYCHOLOGY, EXPERIMENTAL Computers in Human Behavior Pub Date : 2024-08-24 DOI:10.1016/j.chb.2024.108423
Yun Li , Qingwei Chen , Meiheng He , Siyu Li , Yuping Chen , Taotao Ru , Guofu Zhou
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Abstract

The current study aimed to examine the bi-directional relationships between pre-sleep electronic media use and sleep, and to assess the relative predictive strength of different types of electronic media use in the evening on subsequent sleep. Eighty-eight young adults (20.57 ± 0.99, 27 males) completed an online intake survey and received notifications to complete daily diaries for seven consecutive days. Results of dynamic structural equation models (DSEM) revealed that the total screen time, sleep onset time, sleep latency, sleep duration, and sleep quality showed significant positive autoregressive parameters. In contrast, the results revealed no statistically significant cross-lagged associations between the total screen time in the evening and sleep outcomes. Inspection of the predictive strength of various types of screen activities at the within-person level revealed that increased active social media use is linked to delayed sleep onset, while internet browsing is associated with shorter sleep latency. At the between-person level, screen time of T.V. watching, video streaming, social media use, and shopping correlated with delayed sleep onset. Shopping was also connected to longer sleep latency. Additionally, more time spent on T.V., video streaming, non-work internet browsing, and shopping was linked to reduced total sleep duration. These findings indicated a screen activity-dependent association between pre-sleep screen time and subsequent sleep. More objective assessments of electronic media use (e.g., app recording screen time) and sleep (e.g., actigraphy) and longitudinal monitoring over a relatively long period (i.e., several weeks or months) are warred to further elucidate (cross-lagged) relationships between electronic media use and sleep.

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睡前使用电子媒体与睡眠之间的双向关系调查:一项为期七天的乳制品研究
本研究旨在考察睡前使用电子媒体与睡眠之间的双向关系,并评估晚上使用不同类型电子媒体对随后睡眠的相对预测强度。88名年轻人(20.57±0.99,27名男性)完成了在线摄入量调查,并收到了连续七天完成每日日记的通知。动态结构方程模型(DSEM)的结果显示,总屏幕时间、睡眠开始时间、睡眠潜伏期、睡眠持续时间和睡眠质量显示出显著的正自回归参数。相比之下,结果显示晚上的总屏幕时间与睡眠结果之间没有统计学意义上的交叉滞后关系。对各种类型的屏幕活动在人内层面的预测强度进行检查后发现,社交媒体使用活跃度的增加与睡眠开始时间的延迟有关,而互联网浏览与睡眠潜伏期的缩短有关。在人与人之间,观看电视、视频流媒体、使用社交媒体和购物的屏幕时间与睡眠开始时间延迟有关。购物也与较长的睡眠潜伏期有关。此外,观看电视、视频流媒体、浏览非工作互联网和购物的时间越长,总睡眠时间越短。这些研究结果表明,睡前屏幕时间与随后的睡眠之间存在着屏幕活动依赖关系。为了进一步阐明电子媒体使用与睡眠之间的(交叉滞后)关系,我们需要对电子媒体使用(如记录屏幕时间的应用程序)和睡眠(如行为记录仪)进行更客观的评估,并在相对较长的时间内(如数周或数月)进行纵向监测。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
19.10
自引率
4.00%
发文量
381
审稿时长
40 days
期刊介绍: Computers in Human Behavior is a scholarly journal that explores the psychological aspects of computer use. It covers original theoretical works, research reports, literature reviews, and software and book reviews. The journal examines both the use of computers in psychology, psychiatry, and related fields, and the psychological impact of computer use on individuals, groups, and society. Articles discuss topics such as professional practice, training, research, human development, learning, cognition, personality, and social interactions. It focuses on human interactions with computers, considering the computer as a medium through which human behaviors are shaped and expressed. Professionals interested in the psychological aspects of computer use will find this journal valuable, even with limited knowledge of computers.
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