Sound reasons for unsound sleep: Comparative support for the sentinel hypothesis in industrial and nonindustrial groups.

IF 3.3 3区 医学 Q2 EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY Evolution, Medicine, and Public Health Pub Date : 2022-11-22 eCollection Date: 2023-01-01 DOI:10.1093/emph/eoac039
Leela McKinnon, Eric C Shattuck, David R Samson
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Abstract

Background and objectives: Sleep is a vulnerable state in which individuals are more susceptible to threat, which may have led to evolved mechanisms for increasing safety. The sentinel hypothesis proposes that brief awakenings during sleep may be a strategy for detecting and responding to environmental threats. Observations of sleep segmentation and group sentinelization in hunter-gatherer and small-scale communities support this hypothesis, but to date it has not been tested in comparisons with industrial populations characterized by more secure sleep environments.

Methodology: Here, we compare wake after sleep onset (WASO), a quantitative measure of nighttime awakenings, between two nonindustrial and two industrial populations: Hadza hunter-gatherers (n = 33), Malagasy small-scale agriculturalists (n = 38), and Hispanic (n = 1,531) and non-Hispanic White (NHW) (n = 347) Americans. We compared nighttime awakenings between these groups using actigraphically-measured sleep data. We fit linear models to assess whether WASO varies across groups, controlling for sex and age.

Results: We found that WASO varies significantly by group membership and is highest in Hadza (2.44 h) and Malagasy (1.93 h) and lowest in non-Hispanic Whites (0.69 h). Hispanics demonstrate intermediate WASO (0.86 h), which is significantly more than NHW participants. After performing supplementary analysis within the Hispanic sample, we found that WASO is significantly and positively associated with increased perception of neighborhood violence.

Conclusions and implications: Consistent with principles central to evolutionary medicine, we propose that evolved mechanisms to increase vigilance during sleep may now be mismatched with relatively safer environments, and in part responsible for driving poor sleep health.

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不健康睡眠的合理原因:在工业和非工业群体中对哨兵假说的比较支持。
背景和目的:睡眠是一种脆弱的状态,在这种状态下,个体更容易受到威胁,这可能导致进化出提高安全性的机制。哨兵假说认为,睡眠中的短暂觉醒可能是检测和应对环境威胁的一种策略。在狩猎采集者和小规模社区中观察到的睡眠分段和群体哨兵化现象支持了这一假说,但迄今为止,这一假说还没有在与具有更安全睡眠环境特征的工业人群的比较中得到验证:方法:在此,我们比较了两种非工业人群和两种工业人群的夜间觉醒情况:哈德扎狩猎采集者(n = 33)、马达加斯加小农(n = 38)以及西班牙裔美国人(n = 1,531 )和非西班牙裔白人(NHW)(n = 347)。我们使用动图测量的睡眠数据比较了这些群体的夜间觉醒情况。在控制性别和年龄的情况下,我们拟合了线性模型来评估不同群体的 WASO 是否存在差异:我们发现,不同群体成员的 WASO 有显著差异,哈德扎人(2.44 小时)和马达加斯加人(1.93 小时)的 WASO 最高,非西班牙裔白人(0.69 小时)的 WASO 最低。西班牙裔人的 WASO 处于中等水平(0.86 小时),明显高于非西班牙裔白人。在对西班牙裔样本进行补充分析后,我们发现,WASO 与邻里暴力感知的增加呈显著正相关:与进化医学的核心原则一致,我们认为,进化出的提高睡眠警觉性的机制现在可能与相对更安全的环境不匹配,并在一定程度上导致了睡眠健康状况不佳。
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来源期刊
Evolution, Medicine, and Public Health
Evolution, Medicine, and Public Health Environmental Science-Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis
CiteScore
5.40
自引率
2.70%
发文量
37
审稿时长
8 weeks
期刊介绍: About the Journal Founded by Stephen Stearns in 2013, Evolution, Medicine, and Public Health is an open access journal that publishes original, rigorous applications of evolutionary science to issues in medicine and public health. It aims to connect evolutionary biology with the health sciences to produce insights that may reduce suffering and save lives. Because evolutionary biology is a basic science that reaches across many disciplines, this journal is open to contributions on a broad range of topics.
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