Sleep researchers studied game performance to understand how
late-night social media use and sleep deprivation might affect
occupational and physical performance the following day.
"Most of us have these devices in our bedrooms and beds, and they
interfere with our bedtime routines, keep us up at night and reduce
our sleep quality," said Lauren Hale of Stony Brook University in
New York, in email to Reuters Health.
Hale's team analyzed time-stamped tweets for 112 NBA players between
2009-2016 and looked at next-day points scored, rebounds, minutes
played per game, turnovers, fouls and shooting accuracy. To avoid
the potential effects of travel or jetlag, they only analyzed games
where East Coast players played East Coast players and West Coast
players played West Coast players. They defined "late-night
tweeting" as activity between 11 p.m. and 7 a.m.
They found that late-night tweeting was associated with fewer points
scored and fewer rebounds the following day. Shooting accuracy
seemed particularly affected: players made successful baskets at 1.7
percentage points less following late-night activity.
The pattern persisted when researchers looked only at tweets made
between 2 a.m. and 6 a.m. Furthermore, players who were infrequent
late-night tweeters were affected more than those who habitually
stayed up and tweeted late at night frequently.
Late-night tweeting was also linked with less time played the next
day.
The study can't prove that late-night social media activity caused
any of these outcomes. With regard to less time played, for example,
"Maybe the coach sensed they were off, but maybe the player already
knew they weren't going to play much, and that's why they stayed up
late the night before the game," Hale said.
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Late-night tweeters also committed fewer turnovers and fouls, but
that could be attributed to being less active on the court.
Hale and colleagues are continuing to study athletes, but they're
also focused on improving sleep for vulnerable populations such as
shift workers and teens.
"We all need to sleep well and function during the day," Hale said.
"This (study in pro athletes) was a way to look at sleep and
functioning in a way that speaks to a broader audience."
"It's also crucial to examine the association between the late-night
use of different social media and accidents the following day among
everyday citizens," said sleep researcher Mohamed Arbi Mejri of the
National Center of Medicine and Science in Sports in Tunis, Tunisia,
in an email to Reuters Health. In earlier work, Mejri, who wasn't
involved with this study, found that one night of partial sleep
deprivation could affect the performance of Taekwondo athletes the
next day.
Mejri recommends good sleep hygiene, which includes putting devices
away an hour before bedtime and eliminating screen light or blue
light from the bedroom while sleeping.
"Even among elite performers, not getting enough sleep impairs
next-day functioning," Hale said. "If you want to be your best self
every day, try putting away your phone at night."
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2CyLdqw Sleep Health, online November 19,
2018.
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