Externalizing Behaviors and Callous-Unemotional Traits: Different Associations With Sleep Quality

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

  • Dan Denis
  • Reece Akhtar
  • Benjamin C. Holding
  • Christina Murray
  • Jennifer Panatti
  • Gordon Claridge
  • Avi Sadeh
  • Nicola L. Barclay
  • Rachael O'Leary
  • Barbara Maughan
  • Tom A. McAdams
  • Richard Rowe
  • Thalia C. Eley
  • Essi Viding
  • Alice M. Gregory

Study Objectives: Sleep quality is associated with different aspects of psychopathology, but relatively little research has examined links between sleep quality and externalizing behaviors or callous-unemotional traits. We examined: (1) whether an association exists between sleep quality and externalizing behaviors; (2) whether anxiety mediates this association; (3) whether callous-unemotional traits are associated with sleep quality.

Methods: Data from two studies were used. Study 1 involved 1556 participants of the G1219 study aged 18-27 years (62% female). Questionnaire measures assessed sleep quality, anxiety, externalizing behaviors, and callous-unemotional traits. Study 2 involved 338 participants aged 18-66 years (65% female). Questionnaires measured sleep quality, externalizing behaviors, and callous-unemotional traits. In order to assess objective sleep quality, actigraphic data were also recorded for a week from a subsample of study 2 participants (n = 43).

Results: In study 1, poorer sleep quality was associated with greater externalizing behaviors. This association was partially mediated by anxiety and moderated by levels of callous-unemotional traits. There was no significant relationship between sleep quality and callous-unemotional traits. In study 2, poorer sleep quality, as assessed via self-reported but not objective measures, was associated with higher levels of externalizing behaviors. Furthermore, in study 2, better sleep quality (indicated in both questionnaires and actigraphy measures: lower mean activity, and greater sleep efficiency) was associated with higher levels of callous-unemotional traits.

Conclusions: Self-reports of poorer sleep quality are associated with externalizing behaviors, and this association is partially mediated by anxiety. Callous-unemotional traits are not associated with poor sleep and may even be related to better sleep quality. This is an exceptional finding given that poor sleep quality appears to be a characteristic of most psychopathology.

OriginalsprogEngelsk
TidsskriftSleep
Vol/bind40
Udgave nummer8
ISSN0161-8105
DOI
StatusUdgivet - 1 aug. 2017

ID: 255164889