Chronobiology international

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

Updated

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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