Many people contend that people who naturally tend to be Night Owls do better on a later sleep schedule – meaning going to bed later and waking up later. But is that really true?
The short
answer seems to be no! In a large Stanford
University study looking at sleep habits of 73,880 adults the study concluded
that it did not matter whether the time people felt they naturally wanted to
sleep corresponded to when they actually did.
Instead,
regardless of people’s sleep timing preference, people who stayed up late at
night had higher rates of behavioral and mental disorders than those who did
not. This surprised researchers.
Researchers
used movement trackers to track study participants’ activity so they would know
when people actually slept along with having access to their health records to
track behavioral and mental disorders.
Here is a
detailed description of the results:
· People who described themselves as
morning types, and who went to bed early and rose with the sun had the best
mental health.
· People who described themselves as
evening types but who nevertheless went to bed early had the second-best mental
health.
· People who described themselves as
morning types but who found themselves going to bed late "suffered, but not too much," and
· People who described themselves as
evening types and who went to bed late had by far the worst outcome, with
between a 20 and 40 percent likelihood of having been diagnosed with
a behavioral or mental health disorder.
On some
level this should not be a huge surprise because our evolutionary heritage included rising early with the sun and laying down relatively early after the sun went
down. For hundreds of thousands or
years prior to modern electricity the sun and fires were the only light we saw, and our physiology adjusted to the rise and fall of the Sun and changes in the
type of light we experienced.
In addition research shows that the majority of deep sleep occurs in the hours immediately after falling asleep so late bedtimes shorten deep sleep opportunity. Your grandparents were on the right track when they said "each our of sleep before midnight is worth two after." While an exaggeration earlier bed times support better overall sleep!
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