PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Teen night owls likely to perform worse academically, emotionally

Study shows school-year bedtimes impact grades

2013-11-11
(Press-News.org) Contact information: Yasmin Anwar
yanwar@berkeley.edu
510-643-7944
University of California - Berkeley
Teen night owls likely to perform worse academically, emotionally Study shows school-year bedtimes impact grades Teenagers who go to bed late during the school year are more prone to academic and emotional difficulties in the long run, compared to their earlier-to-bed counterparts, according to a new study from the University of California, Berkeley.

Berkeley researchers analyzed longitudinal data from a nationally representative cohort of 2,700 U.S. adolescents of whom 30 percent reported bedtimes later than 11:30 p.m. on school days and 1:30 a.m. in the summer in their middle and high school years.

By the time they graduated from high school, the school-year night owls had lower GPA scores, and were more vulnerable to emotional problems than teens with earlier bedtimes, according to the study published online Nov.10 in the Journal of Adolescent Health.

The results present a compelling argument in favor of later middle and high school start times in the face of intense academic, social and technological pressures, researchers said.

"Academic pressures, busy after-school schedules, and the desire to finally have free time at the end of the day to connect with friends on the phone or online make this problem even more challenging," said Lauren Asarnow, lead author of the study and a graduate student in UC Berkeley's Golden Bear Sleep and Mood Research Clinic.

On a positive note, she said the findings underscore how a healthy sleep cycle promotes the academic and emotional success of adolescents.

"The good news is that sleep behavior is highly modifiable with the right support," said Asarnow, citing UC Berkeley's Teen Sleep Study, a treatment program designed to reset the biological clocks of adolescents who have trouble going to sleep and waking up.

This latest UC Berkeley study used data from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health, which has tracked the influences and behaviors of adolescents since 1994. Focusing on three time periods – the onset of puberty, a year later and young adulthood – UC Berkeley researchers compared how the sleep habits of 2,700 teemagers aged 13-18 impacted their academic, social and emotional development. They looked at participants' school transcripts and other education and health data.

While going to bed late in the summer did not appear to impact their academic achievement, including grades, researchers did find a correlation between later summer bedtimes and emotional problems in young adulthood.

Surveys show that many teenagers do not get the recommended nine hours sleep a night, and report having trouble staying awake at school. The human circadian rhythm, which regulates physiological and metabolic functions, typically shifts to a later sleep cycle at the onset of puberty. UC Berkeley researchers theorize that an "evening circadian preference" in adolescence is a confluence of biological factors, as well as parental monitoring, academic and social pressures and the use of electronic gadgetry.

For example, bright lights associated with laptops, smartphones and other electronic devices have been found to suppress melatonin, a hormone that helps regulate the sleep cycle. UC Berkeley's Teen Sleep Study uses dim lighting and limits technology before bedtime, among other interventions, to help reverse this night-owl tendency.

'This very important study adds to the already clear evidence that youth who are night owls are at greater risk for adverse outcomes," said UC Berkeley psychologist Allison Harvey, senior author of the paper. "Helping teens go to bed earlier may be an important pathway for reducing risk. This will not be an easy process. But here at Berkeley, our sleep coaches draw from the science of motivation, habit formation and sleep to help teens achieve earlier bedtimes."

### END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Could deceased heart attack victims expand donor pool?

2013-11-11
Could deceased heart attack victims expand donor pool? Livers from donors with pre-hospital cardiac arrest considered for transplant Researchers from the U.K. suggest that using organs from donors after circulatory death (DCD) who also suffered a previous cardiac arrest out of ...

New cause found for muscle-weakening disease myasthenia gravis

2013-11-11
New cause found for muscle-weakening disease myasthenia gravis Augusta, Ga. – An antibody to a protein critical to enabling the brain to talk to muscles has been identified as a cause of myasthenia gravis, researchers report. The ...

Nail gun injuries on the rise

2013-11-11
Nail gun injuries on the rise Young males in the work environment are at greatest risk of sustaining a nail gun injury to their non-dominant hand, a new study has found. Writing in the latest Early View issue of Emergency Medicine Australasia, the journal of the Australasian College for ...

Methane-munching microorganisms meddle with metals

2013-11-11
Methane-munching microorganisms meddle with metals On the continental margins, where the seafloor drops hundreds of meters below the water's surface, low temperatures and high pressure lock methane inside ice crystals. Called methane hydrates, these ...

@Toxicology in the Twittersphere: More than just 140 characters

2013-11-11
@Toxicology in the Twittersphere: More than just 140 characters A valuable role exists for the use of social media in medicine, new research has shown. Dr Joe-Anthony Rotella, in a letter to the editor in the latest Early View issue of Emergency Medicine Australasia, the journal of the ...

Signal found to enhance survival of new brain cells

2013-11-11
Signal found to enhance survival of new brain cells Implications for treating neurodegenerative disease, mental illness A specialized type of brain cell that tamps down stem cell activity ironically, perhaps, encourages the survival of the stem cells' progeny, Johns ...

Some 'healthy' vegetable oils may actually increase risk of heart disease

2013-11-11
Some 'healthy' vegetable oils may actually increase risk of heart disease Health Canada should reconsider health claim for omega-6 oils on food labels Some vegetable oils that claim to be healthy may actually increase the risk of heart disease, and Health Canada ...

Better police surveillance technologies come with a cost, scholar says

2013-11-11
Better police surveillance technologies come with a cost, scholar says CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — The ever-increasing adoption of digital surveillance technologies by local police departments may dramatically improve the efficiency of criminal investigations, ...

Scholar: Empower Congress to bolster separation of powers

2013-11-11
Scholar: Empower Congress to bolster separation of powers CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — Although it may not receive high marks these days as a public body, Congress should actually be empowered so it can uphold the constitutional checks and balances that ...

APOL1 gene speeds kidney disease progression and failure in blacks, regardless of diabetes status

2013-11-11
APOL1 gene speeds kidney disease progression and failure in blacks, regardless of diabetes status Penn Medicine leads scientific and data coordinating center for national kidney study PHILADELPHIA—A large study co-authored by Penn Medicine ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Breaking free from dependence on rare resources! A domestic high-performance permanent magnet emerges!

Symptoms of long-COVID can last up to two years after infection with COVID-19

Violence is forcing women in Northern Ireland into homelessness, finds new report

Latin American intensivists denounce economic and cultural inequities in the global scientific publishing system

Older adults might be more resistant to bird flu infections than children, Penn research finds

Dramatic increase in research funding needed to counter productivity slowdown in farming

How chemistry and force etch mysterious spiral patterns on solid surfaces

Unraveling the mysteries of polycystic kidney disease

Mother’s high-fat diet can cause liver stress in fetus, study shows

Weighing in on a Mars water debate

Researchers ‘seq’ and find a way to make pig retinal cells to advance eye treatments

Re-purposed FDA-approved drug could help treat high-grade glioma

Understanding gamma rays in our universe through StarBurst

Study highlights noninvasive hearing aid 

NASA taps UTA to shape future of autonomous aviation

Mutations disrupt touch-based learning, study finds

Misha lived in zoos, but the elephant’s tooth enamel helps reconstruct wildlife migrations

Eat better, breathe easier? Research points to link between diet, lung cancer

Mesozoic mammals had uniform dark fur

Wartime destruction of Kakhovka Dam in Ukraine has long-term environmental consequences

NIH’s flat 15% funding policy is misguided and damaging

AI reveals new insights into the flow of Antarctic ice

Scientists solve decades-long Parkinson’s mystery

Spinning, twisted light could power next-generation electronics

A planetary boundary for geological resources: Limits of regional water availability

Astronomy’s dirty window to space

New study reveals young, active patients who have total knee replacements are unlikely to need revision surgery in their lifetime

Thinking outside the box: Uncovering a novel approach to brainwave monitoring

Combination immunotherapy before surgery may increase survival in people with head and neck cancer

MIT engineers turn skin cells directly into neurons for cell therapy

[Press-News.org] Teen night owls likely to perform worse academically, emotionally
Study shows school-year bedtimes impact grades