The relationship between sleep and interoception

Author: Louisa G Bynum1, Ryan C Brindle1,2
Affiliation:
1 Neuroscience Program, Washington and Lee University, Lexington, Kentucky, USA.
2 Department of Cognitive and Behavioral Science, Washington and Lee University, Lexington, Kentucky, USA.
Conference/Journal: J Sleep Res
Date published: 2024 Sep 12
Other: Pages: e14337 , Special Notes: doi: 10.1111/jsr.14337. , Word Count: 242


The present study aimed to characterise the relationship between sleep and interoception in two independent studies. Theoretical grounds for such a relationship include a weak relationship between subjectively- and objectively-measured sleep, the covariance of sleep with pain, as well as the mass regulation of a number of visceral biological systems. In addition, such a relationship is often reflected in our language (i.e., 'feeling' tired). In both studies (Study 1: N = 118, 73% female, mean age 20.98 years; Study 2: N = 830, 49% female, mean age 38.04 years) sleep over the last month was self-reported. Confidence in interoceptive accuracy, which is the precision with which a person can monitor visceral signals, was measured using the Interoceptive Accuracy Scale, while interoceptive attention, which is the dispositional tendency to attend to bodily signals, was measured using the Body Perception Questionnaire. Study 1 revealed a relationship between long sleep latency and low confidence in interoceptive accuracy (β = -0.222, p = 0.021) and poor sleep quality and less interoceptive attention (β = -0.226, p = 0.016). Study 2 replicated these results as well as made clear a more general pattern whereby poor sleep-characterised by short duration, poor quality, less efficiency, long latency, and more frequent nighttime awakenings-related to an interoceptive phenotype of less confidence in interoceptive accuracy and more interoceptive attention (all β ≥ 0.047, p ≤ 0.17). In conclusion, results from these two independent studies provide robust cross-sectional evidence for associations between various dimensions of poor sleep and greater interoceptive attention, but less confidence in interoceptive accuracy.

Keywords: anxiety; interoceptive accuracy; interoceptive attention; sleep.

PMID: 39266010 DOI: 10.1111/jsr.14337

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