Relationship Between Sleep Quality and Mood: Ecological Momentary Assessment Study

Sleep disturbances play an important role in everyday affect and vice versa. However, the causal day-to-day interaction between sleep and mood has not been thoroughly explored, partly because of the lack of daily assessment data. Mobile phones enable us to collect ecological momentary assessment dat...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inJMIR mental health Vol. 6; no. 3; p. e12613
Main Authors Triantafillou, Sofia, Saeb, Sohrab, Lattie, Emily G, Mohr, David C, Kording, Konrad Paul
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Canada JMIR Publications 27.03.2019
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:Sleep disturbances play an important role in everyday affect and vice versa. However, the causal day-to-day interaction between sleep and mood has not been thoroughly explored, partly because of the lack of daily assessment data. Mobile phones enable us to collect ecological momentary assessment data on a daily basis in a noninvasive manner. This study aimed to investigate the relationship between self-reported daily mood and sleep quality. A total of 208 adult participants were recruited to report mood and sleep patterns daily via their mobile phones for 6 consecutive weeks. Participants were recruited in 4 roughly equal groups: depressed and anxious, depressed only, anxious only, and controls. The effect of daily mood on sleep quality and vice versa were assessed using mixed effects models and propensity score matching. All methods showed a significant effect of sleep quality on mood and vice versa. However, within individuals, the effect of sleep quality on next-day mood was much larger than the effect of previous-day mood on sleep quality. We did not find these effects to be confounded by the participants' past mood and sleep quality or other variables such as stress, physical activity, and weather conditions. We found that daily sleep quality and mood are related, with the effect of sleep quality on mood being significantly larger than the reverse. Correcting for participant fixed effects dramatically affected results. Causal analysis suggests that environmental factors included in the study and sleep and mood history do not mediate the relationship.
ISSN:2368-7959
2368-7959
DOI:10.2196/12613