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Overnight affective dynamics and sleep characteristics as predictors of depression and its development

Authors :
O. Minaeva
S. George
A. Kuranova
M. Wichers
H. Riese
S. Booij
Source :
European Psychiatry, Vol 64, Pp S327-S327 (2021)
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Cambridge University Press, 2021.

Abstract

Introduction Greater affective inertia during the day (higher carry-over effects of prior affect to the current moment) is associated with depression and its development. However, the role of overnight affective inertia (from evening to morning) in depression, and the role of sleep therein, has been scarcely studied. Objectives We examined i) the difference in overnight inertia for positive (PA) and negative affect (NA) between individuals with past depression, current depression, and no depression; ii) how sleep duration and quality influence overnight affective inertia in these groups, and iii) whether overnight affective inertia predicts depression development. Methods We used data of 579 women from the East-Flanders Prospective Twin Survey. First, individuals with past (n=82), current (n=26), and no depression (n=471) at baseline were examined, and then individuals who did (n=58) and did not (n=319) develop depression at 12-months follow-up. Affect was assessed 10 times a day for 5 days. Sleep was assessed with sleep diaries. Affective inertia was operationalized as the influence of affectt-1 on affectt. Linear mixed-effect models were used to test the hypotheses. Results Overnight affective inertia was not associated with depression, neither was it differently associated with sleep characteristics in the depression groups. However, sleep characteristics were more negatively associated with morning NA in both depression groups compared to the non-depressed group. Overnight affective inertia did not predict the development of depression at follow-up. Conclusions Depression and sleep characteristics might be more related to mean affect levels rather than to more complex emotion dynamics measures. Replication of these findings with longer time-series is needed.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09249338 and 17783585
Volume :
64
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
European Psychiatry
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.52d805c3fdca4b19aa7176e5c282d316
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1192/j.eurpsy.2021.877