Influence of Chronotype, Season, and Sex of Subject on Sleep Behavior of Young Adults

Nov 13, 2007Chronobiology international

How sleep patterns in young adults vary with body clock type, season, and sex

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Abstract

Morning types exhibited 87.9% sleep efficiency compared to 84.3% for evening types.

  • No significant sex-specific differences were observed in sleep efficiency, sleep onset latency, or actual sleep-time duration.
  • Autumn was associated with a longer average sleep duration of 6.9 hours, compared to 6.6 hours in spring.
  • Individuals with no preference for morning or evening were the most common chronotype among the studied population.
  • Men were more likely to identify as evening types compared to women, with 28.9% of males versus 20.8% of females.
  • Females showed a higher tendency for morning types, with 20.3% of females compared to 15.6% of males.

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