就寝时间                        
                
                                
                        
                            活动记录                        
                
                                
                        
                            心理学                        
                
                                
                        
                            睡眠(系统调用)                        
                
                                
                        
                            持续时间(音乐)                        
                
                                
                        
                            学业成绩                        
                
                                
                        
                            发展心理学                        
                
                                
                        
                            人口学                        
                
                                
                        
                            听力学                        
                
                                
                        
                            医学                        
                
                                
                        
                            失眠症                        
                
                                
                        
                            精神科                        
                
                                
                        
                            艺术                        
                
                                
                        
                            社会学                        
                
                                
                        
                            文学类                        
                
                                
                        
                            操作系统                        
                
                                
                        
                            计算机科学                        
                
                        
                    
            作者
            
                J. David Creswell,Michael Tumminia,Stephen Price,Yasaman S. Sefidgar,Sheldon Cohen,Yiyi Ren,Jennifer Brown,Anind K. Dey,Janine M. Dutcher,Daniella K. Villalba,Jennifer Mankoff,Xuhai Xu,Kasey G. Creswell,Afsaneh Doryab,Stephen M. Mattingly,Aaron Striegel,David Hachen,Gonzalo J. Martinez,Marsha C. Lovett            
         
                    
        
    
            
            标识
            
                                    DOI:10.1073/pnas.2209123120
                                    
                                
                                 
         
        
                
            摘要
            
            Academic achievement in the first year of college is critical for setting students on a pathway toward long-term academic and life success, yet little is known about the factors that shape early college academic achievement. Given the important role sleep plays in learning and memory, here we extend this work to evaluate whether nightly sleep duration predicts change in end-of-semester grade point average (GPA). First-year college students from three independent universities provided sleep actigraphy for a month early in their winter/spring academic term across five studies. Findings showed that greater early-term total nightly sleep duration predicted higher end-of-term GPA, an effect that persisted even after controlling for previous-term GPA and daytime sleep. Specifically, every additional hour of average nightly sleep duration early in the semester was associated with an 0.07 increase in end-of-term GPA. Sensitivity analyses using sleep thresholds also indicated that sleeping less than 6 h each night was a period where sleep shifted from helpful to harmful for end-of-term GPA, relative to previous-term GPA. Notably, predictive relationships with GPA were specific to total nightly sleep duration, and not other markers of sleep, such as the midpoint of a student’s nightly sleep window or bedtime timing variability. These findings across five studies establish nightly sleep duration as an important factor in academic success and highlight the potential value of testing early academic term total sleep time interventions during the formative first year of college.
         
            
 
                 
                
                    
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