Jianghong Liu , Jan Magielski , Andrea Glenn , Adrian Raine
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According to the guidelines of the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis, the varying methodological approaches used in these studies were analyzed and synthesized, including examining differences and similarities in outcomes between distinct study designs (longitudinal vs cross-sectional), sleep measures (objective vs subjective vs a combination of both), informants (parents, self-report, teachers), and recruited participants (clinical, subclinical and typical populations). The assessment of risk of bias and quality of studies was guided by the instruments employed in research on sleep and behavior in the past. This review establishes that a bidirectional relationship between sleep problems and externalizing behavior clearly exists, and identifies limitations in the existing literature. 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引用次数: 2
摘要
众所周知,睡眠和行为是相互关联的。虽然有研究调查了这种关联,但很少有人评估两者之间的双向关系。据我们所知,这是第一次对睡眠和外化行为之间的相互关系进行全面分析的系统综述。五个数据库(PsycINFO, PubMed, Web of Science, Scopus和Google Scholar)被用来产生总共3,762项研究,其中20项符合条件的研究,检验睡眠和外化行为的双向性的实证文章被选中进行分析。根据系统评价和荟萃分析首选报告项目的指导方针,对这些研究中使用的不同方法方法进行了分析和综合,包括检查不同研究设计(纵向与横断面)之间结果的异同,睡眠测量(客观与主观与两者的结合),信息提供者(父母,自我报告,教师)和招募的参与者(临床,亚临床和典型人群)。偏倚风险和研究质量的评估以过去睡眠和行为研究中使用的工具为指导。本综述明确了睡眠问题与外化行为之间存在双向关系,并指出了现有文献的局限性。此外,针对外化行为和睡眠问题的早期干预的重要性被强调为打破睡眠-外化行为关系的潜在有效方法。尽管如此,在进行更多操纵睡眠和评估外化行为变化的试验之前,不能宣称因果关系。
The bidirectional relationship between sleep and externalizing behavior: A systematic review
It is well-established that sleep and behavior are interrelated. Although studies have investigated this association, not many have evaluated the bidirectional relationship between the two. To our knowledge this is the first systematic review providing a comprehensive analysis of a reciprocal relationship between sleep and externalizing behavior. Five databases (PsycINFO, PubMed, Web of Science, Scopus, and Google Scholar) were utilized to yield a total of 3,762 studies of which 20 eligible studies, empirical articles examining bidirectionality of sleep and externalizing behavior, were selected for analysis. According to the guidelines of the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis, the varying methodological approaches used in these studies were analyzed and synthesized, including examining differences and similarities in outcomes between distinct study designs (longitudinal vs cross-sectional), sleep measures (objective vs subjective vs a combination of both), informants (parents, self-report, teachers), and recruited participants (clinical, subclinical and typical populations). The assessment of risk of bias and quality of studies was guided by the instruments employed in research on sleep and behavior in the past. This review establishes that a bidirectional relationship between sleep problems and externalizing behavior clearly exists, and identifies limitations in the existing literature. Furthermore, the importance of early interventions that target both externalizing behaviors and sleep problems is highlighted as a potentially effective way of breaking the sleep-externalizing behavior relationship. Nonetheless, causality cannot be claimed until more trials that manipulate sleep and evaluate changes in externalizing behavior are conducted.