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Articles

Three dimensions of individual variation in phase angle between sleep timing and timing of nocturnal rise of the feeling of sleepiness

Pages 147-158 | Received 08 Sep 2014, Accepted 11 Sep 2014, Published online: 15 Oct 2014
 

Abstract

Studies of melatonin and body temperature rhythms revealed that women, younger adults, and morning-oriented types show a relatively larger phase angle between entrained circadian phase and sleep timing than men, older adults, and evening-oriented types, respectively. However, none of these studies has been designed to compare participants representing all these three dimensions of individual variation. Since daily fluctuations in self-reported level of alertness–sleepiness closely follow the circadian rhythms of melatonin and body temperature, one can predict that a study of circadian phase characteristics of fluctuations of sleepiness shell reveals identical sex-, age-, and diurnal type-related differences in phase angle between circadian phase and sleep timing. Analysis of self-scorings of alertness–sleepiness provided by 130 healthy participants of sleep deprivation experiments confirmed this prediction. It seems that both fundamental research and field studies of sleep-deprived individuals can benefit from the evaluation of circadian phase through self-assessment of nocturnal rise of alertness–sleepiness.

Additional information

Funding

Funding. The experimental study was supported by the Russian Foundation for Basic Research [grant number 07-06-00263-a], [grant number 10-06-00114-a], and [grant number 13-06-00042-a]; and the Russian Foundation for Humanities [grant number 06-06-00375-a] and [grant number 12-06-18001-e]. I am indebted to Dr. Evgeniy Verevkin and Olga Donskaya for their help in collecting, analyzing, and simulating data on KSS scorings.

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