Development of Late Circadian Preference: Sleep Timing From Childhood to Late Adolescence

Dec 10, 2017The Journal of pediatrics

How Sleep Timing Shifts Toward a Nighttime Preference from Childhood to Late Teen Years

AI simplified

Abstract

Sleep timing was significantly earlier among morning types compared with evening types at all ages (P values < .04).

  • Mean differences in sleep midpoint between morning and evening types increased from 19 minutes at age 8 to 89 minutes at age 17.
  • The largest change in sleep timing occurred between ages 12 and 17 years.
  • Sleep duration, wake after sleep onset, sleep efficiency, and catch-up sleep did not differ according to circadian preference.
  • Significant continuity in sleep timing was observed from childhood to adolescence over 9 years.

AI simplified

Full Text

Full text is available at the source.

what lands in your inbox each week:

  • 📚7 fresh studies
  • 📝plain-language summaries
  • direct links to original studies
  • 🏅top journal indicators
  • 📅weekly delivery
  • 🧘‍♂️always free