Frequent media use before bedtime may be causing some children to get less sleep, especially children who have trouble self-regulating behavior, according to a new study.
Screen time in the hour before bedtime could cause some kids to get less sleep, especially children who have trouble self-regulating behavior, reports a new study. The findings of the study are published in the journal Psychological Science.// "Among kids who used the same amount of media in the hour before bed, we found differences that were explained by a personality characteristic called effortful control," said Leah Doane, associate professor of psychology at ASU and senior author on the paper.
‘Frequent media use by children before bed is linked to later bedtimes and less sleep. Kids who struggle to self-regulate behavior are most impacted.
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"Kids who score low on measures of effortful control are the ones who struggle to wait to unwrap a present or are easily distracted. We found a strong association between media use in the hour before bed and when these kids went to sleep and how long they slept. Media use before bed was not associated with the sleep of kids who scored high on measures of effortful control." The research team spent a week following 547 children aged 7-9 years. The participant group was socioeconomically diverse and lived in rural and urban areas. The parents kept daily diaries that tracked the children's media use and sleep patterns. They also completed a survey that asked about their children's temperament, including their ability to self-regulate behavior.
For the entire week, the children wore specialized wristwatches called actigraphs that tracked their movement and also ambient light. The actigraph data gave the research team detailed information about when and how long the children slept.
The children slept an average of 8 hours a night and used media before bed for an average of 5 nights during the study week. Children who did not use media before bed during the study week slept 23 minutes more and went to bed 34 minutes earlier than children who used media most nights during the study week.
"Media use was generally associated with shorter sleep duration, but this effect was most pronounced in children with low effortful control," said Sierra Clifford, a research scientist at ASU and first author on the paper. "The impact of media on sleep was also an average effect, meaning that it reflects habitual media use rather than occasionally staying up late to watch a movie."
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"Media exposure mattered for the children who measured lowest in effortful control," Clifford said.
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"Instead of parents wondering how to help their child better regulate their behavior, they can try to focus on creating more consistent sleep and media use schedules," Doane said.
Source-Eurekalert