Lack of Sleep May Cause Anxiety, Depression, Experts Warn

Jan 5, 2018 by News Staff

According to a duo of researchers from State University of New York and Binghamton University, sleeping less than 8 hours a night is associated with repetitive negative thoughts like those seen in anxiety or depression. Their work appears in the Journal of Behavior Therapy and Experimental Psychiatry.

People who sleep less than the recommended eight hours a night more likely to suffer from depression, anxiety. Image credit: Wok & Apix.

People who sleep less than the recommended eight hours a night more likely to suffer from depression, anxiety. Image credit: Wok & Apix.

Professor Meredith Coles and Dr. Jacob Nota assessed the timing and duration of sleep in individuals with moderate to high levels of repetitive negative thoughts.

Fifty-two adults were exposed to different pictures intended to trigger an emotional response, and the researchers tracked their attention through their eye movements.

They discovered that regular sleep disruptions are associated with difficulty in shifting one’s attention away from negative information.

This may mean that inadequate sleep is part of what makes negative intrusive thoughts stick around and interfere with people’s lives.

“We found that people in this study have some tendencies to have thoughts get stuck in their heads, and their elevated negative thinking makes it difficult for them to disengage with the negative stimuli that we exposed them to,” Professor Coles said.

“While other people may be able to receive negative information and move on, the participants had trouble ignoring it.”

“These negative thoughts are believed to leave people vulnerable to different types of psychological disorders, such as anxiety or depression.”

“We realized over time that this might be important — this repetitive negative thinking is relevant to several different disorders like anxiety, depression and many other things.”

“This is novel in that we’re exploring the overlap between sleep disruptions and the way they affect these basic processes that help in ignoring those obsessive negative thoughts.”

Professor Coles and Dr. Nota are further exploring this discovery, evaluating how the timing and duration of sleep may also contribute to the development or maintenance of psychological disorders.

If their theories are correct, their research could potentially allow psychologists to treat anxiety and depression by shifting patients’ sleep cycles to a healthier time or making it more likely a patient will sleep when they get in bed.

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Jacob A. Nota & Meredith E. Coles. 2018. Shorter sleep duration and longer sleep onset latency are related to difficulty disengaging attention from negative emotional images in individuals with elevated transdiagnostic repetitive negative thinking. Journal of Behavior Therapy and Experimental Psychiatry 58: 114-122; doi: 10.1016/j.jbtep.2017.10.003

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