Audio By Carbonatix
When they compared which is worse, researchers found some striking effects on mood.
We’re a nation of unhealthy sleepers. Ten percent of us are insomniacs, many more wake up constantly throughout the night and a growing number are simply too enthralled with our smartphones to put them down and go to bed.
But what’s the worst kind of sleep for your health: the kind where you keep a normal bedtime but are constantly up every few hours, or the kind where you go to bed late and only get a few hours of shut-eye? Scientists might finally have an answer.
Reporting in the journal Sleep, lead author Patrick Finan, assistant professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, and his colleagues conducted one of the first studies comparing the two types of sleep—interrupted sleep and abbreviated sleep—in a group of 62 healthy men and women who were good sleepers.
The participants spent three days and nights in a sleep lab and answered questions about their mood every evening before dozing off. While they slept, the researchers measured their sleep stages so they could document when and how much of each stage of sleep, from light to deeper slumber, each volunteer got every night.
A third were randomly assigned to be woken up several times a night, another third were not allowed to go to sleep until later but weren’t woken up, and the final group, which acted as the control, was allowed to sleep uninterrupted through the night.
When Finan compared the three groups’ mood ratings, he found that the interrupted and short sleepers both showed drops in positive mood after the first night. But on the next nights, the interrupted sleepers continued to report declining positive feelings while the short sleepers did not—they stayed at about the same level they had reported after the first night. This drop in positive mood occurred regardless of what the participants reported on the negative mood scale. So having disrupted sleep, says Finan, may have a stronger effect on dampening positive mood than it does on increasing negative emotions.
When he looked at the brain patterns of the two disrupted sleep groups, he found that those who woke up repeatedly showed less slow wave sleep, or the deep sleep that is normally linked to feeling restored and rested, than those getting the same amount of sleep but in a continuous session. “We saw a drop in slow wave sleep so large and sudden, and it was associated with a striking drop in positive mood that was significantly different than in the other group,” he says.
That has implications for how everything from stress to depression can affect both sleep and mood. Previous data linked poor sleep and depression, and Finan says it may be worth delving deeper into understanding whether depression is associated with more interrupted sleep or shorter sleep.
It’s also not clear whether there is some threshold at which too little sleep begins to adversely affect positive mood in the same way that disrupted sleep does. “It appears that losing slow wave sleep impairs the ability to recover or stabilize positive emotions in response to stressors,” he says. “So we should be paying attention to not just the quantity or quality of sleep, and not simply the quantity or quality of mood or emotions, but the combination of the two.
It’s not news that sleep problems alter people’s mood. But the granularity we measured here sheds new light on that relationship.” You can’t avoid the demands of juggling your work and family obligations, and the inevitable stresses that any relationship entails, but you just might be able to lessen the blow with sleep—as long as it’s uninterrupted.
Latest Stories
-
John Kumah’s widow, Lilian Owusu remarries
13 minutes -
Mastercard boosts Africa acceptance network by 45% in 2025, accelerating the continent’s digital economy
22 minutes -
GNFS to clamp down on traders blocking Fire Hydrants after Cantoments Barracks blaze
34 minutes -
Minority raises concerns over revised lithium agreement
41 minutes -
Developing countries paid more in debt service in 2025 – World Bank
46 minutes -
Education Minister raises concern over prolonged CETAG strike
48 minutes -
MUSIGA Greater Accra names AMISTY GH Discovery Artist of the Year
51 minutes -
Vice President honours Nkrumah’s photographer, Chris Hesse, for safeguarding national memory
56 minutes -
3 arrested for impersonating Speaker, IGP on social media
56 minutes -
BoG to tighten monetary policy in half-year 2026
1 hour -
Parliament approves GH₵357 billion budget for 2026
1 hour -
MAX and Bolt announce strategic partnership to power electric mobility and vehicle ownership in Ghana
1 hour -
Greater Accra poultry farmers association says it was excluded from gov’t ‘Nkoko nkiti nkiti’ initiative
2 hours -
Michael Adangba survives dawn road crash en route to BolgatangaÂ
2 hours -
Court remands 40-year-old man for alleged murder
2 hours
