Does Having a Social Life Mean You Won’t Get Enough Sleep?
Being socially active generally increases your chances of getting a good night’s sleep. But if you are active late into the evening, it reduces the number of hours you sleep—and can also affect your social life. This is according to a new study from Stockholm University and Karolinska Institutet published in the scientific journal PNAS.
Researchers at Stockholm University and Karolinska Institutet studied 641 working adults residing in Sweden. Participants recorded what they were doing every thirty minutes, estimated their level of sleepiness every three hours, and filled out a sleep diary every morning for three weeks.
The results show a clear association between sleepiness and social activity. Higher levels of sleepiness could be linked to a reduction in the number of social activities and the amount of time one engaged in social activity, with the most significant effects seen on days off and during the evenings.
Social activity generally promotes good sleep. The study shows that social activity in the afternoon may be linked to increased sleepiness after the social engagement as well as longer duration of sleep that night. And at the same time, the study shows that a higher level of social activity in the evening was linked to reduced sleepiness and a shorter duration of sleep (20 to 30 minutes less if respondents were active for more than 6 hours).
According to one of the study’s lead authors John Axelsson, PhD, professor of psychology at Stockholm University and associate professor at the Department of Clinical Neuroscience, Karolinska Institutet, the results show that social activity tires us out, just like physical activity, which increases our need for sleep and causes us to sleep longer the next time we sleep.
“On the other hand, a lot of social activity late at night is associated with decreased sleep. The latter is likely linked to times when we prioritize certain types of social activity, such as going out and partying, over sleep. It may also be that certain types of social activity late in the evening make us wound up, and it may then take a little longer to fall asleep,” he says in a release.
“Our study opens the door to new research on how factors such as daylight, coffee, sleep treatments, and other factors that reduce sleepiness can help us live more social lives.”
Axelsson and his colleagues are now conducting studies on how sleep and sleepiness affect the way we interact with our colleagues at work. They are tracking how well workers sleep in greater detail than they did in the current study and examining how often participants are socially active and the quality of social interaction.
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