Relations (1)
related 2.32 — strongly supporting 7 facts
Sleep and health are linked through longitudinal studies that identify causal effects between them [1] and research exploring their bidirectional relationship [2]. Furthermore, both concepts are central to academic discourse regarding their interplay with cognition and society {fact:2, fact:3}.
Facts (7)
Sources
Sleep Across the Lifespan: A Neurobehavioral Perspective link.springer.com 4 facts
referenceZee and Turek (2006) discussed the bidirectional relationship between sleep and health in the Archives of Internal Medicine.
claimLongitudinal burst-designed studies allow for the direct identification of causal effects between sleep, aging, and health, which is vital for designing effective interventions and improving public well-being.
perspectiveFuture research on sleep, health, cognition, physiology, and neurobiology can benefit from multi-wave longitudinal, measurement burst designs that capture temporal progression and interplay.
referenceGrandner (2022) provided an overview of the relationship between sleep, health, and society in Sleep Medicine Clinics.
Short- and long-term health consequences of sleep disruption dovepress.com 1 fact
referenceNissenbaum, Aramini, and Hanning (2012) published a study in Noise & Health titled 'Effects of industrial wind turbine noise on sleep and health' which investigates the impact of environmental noise on sleep quality.
Sleep Deprivation, Sleep Disorders, and Chronic Disease - CDC cdc.gov 1 fact
referenceFoster RG published a paper in 2020 in Interface Focus regarding the relationship between sleep, circadian rhythms, and health.
The New Field of Network Physiology: Building the Human ... frontiersin.org 1 fact
claimHaving structurally intact and functioning systems is insufficient to maintain health; coordinated network interactions among systems and sub-systems are required to generate distinct physiologic states and behaviors at the organism level, such as wake, sleep and sleep stages, rest and exercise, stress and anxiety, cognition, consciousness, and unconsciousness.