ABSTRACT
Sleep problems among adolescents are believed to be related to the circadian changes that occur at this age. Therefore, most self-report instruments that measure sleep patterns in adolescence focus solely on measuring circadian rhythms. However, sleep-wake cycles reflect both circadian and homeostatic processes. Recently, it was shown that answers to the Morningness-Eveningness Questionnaire for adults, which is used to assess circadian typology, were able to identify three interrelated latent factors: two that can be conceptualized as homeostatic (sensitivity to the build-up of sleep pressure and efficiency of dissipation of sleep pressure) and a less well-defined factor related to activity preference time (APT). To better understand self-reported changes in sleep patterns in adolescents we applied confirmatory factor analysis to explore whether responses to the Morningness-Eveningness Scale for Children (MESC) could also identify these three factors. The sample comprised 397, 9- to 17-year-olds. A three-correlated and a bifactor-(S-1) model (with sleep onset characteristics as a reference factor) had acceptable/good fit indices. This indicates that the MESC captures dissociable, but interrelated, homeostatic and circadian processes in addition to APT. These factors correlated with corresponding reported sleep habits, showing individual differences that may be more associated with sleep difficulties than the effects of age, which only correlated very modestly with some sleep habits. Our results indicate that the MESC can show distinct individual differences in three sleep factors that can help identify adolescents at higher risk of sleep-related problems that may require factor-specific interventions.
Acknowledgements
We thank Walter Swardfager for inspiring the idea of the analyses.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).
Notes
1. There was, however, one exception. Item 1 of the “morning” factor (loading = 0.517) (“imagine: school is canceled! You can get up whenever you want to. When would you get out of bed?”) had the highest consistency with the general factor compared to the other items that related to how adolescents feel in the morning. A possible explanation is that item 1 refers to sleep habit preferences which, according to the literature, are more evening oriented in this phase of life [later bed and wakeup times (Crowley et al. Citation2018)]. In contrast, the other “morning” items relate to actual scenarios that reflect sleep pressure dissipation that is supposed to be inefficient until the end of adolescence (Crowley et al. Citation2018): items 2 (“Is it easy for you to get up in the morning”), 3 (“Gym class is set for 7:00 in the morning. How do you think you’ll do?”), and 9 (“Say you had to get up at 6:00 am every morning: What would it be like?”).