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Morningness-eveningness in a large sample of German adolescents and adults

People differ in their sleep-wake behavior. This individual difference is conceptualized in different aspects, such as wake up times, bed times, times of peak performance, as well as in morning affect. A total of 14,987 visitors of an exhibition in the LWL State Museum of Natural History, Münster (G...

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Autores principales: Randler, Christoph, Freyth-Weber, Katharina, Rahafar, Arash, Florez Jurado, Andrea, Kriegs, Jan Ole
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5133733/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27957554
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2016.e00200
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author Randler, Christoph
Freyth-Weber, Katharina
Rahafar, Arash
Florez Jurado, Andrea
Kriegs, Jan Ole
author_facet Randler, Christoph
Freyth-Weber, Katharina
Rahafar, Arash
Florez Jurado, Andrea
Kriegs, Jan Ole
author_sort Randler, Christoph
collection PubMed
description People differ in their sleep-wake behavior. This individual difference is conceptualized in different aspects, such as wake up times, bed times, times of peak performance, as well as in morning affect. A total of 14,987 visitors of an exhibition in the LWL State Museum of Natural History, Münster (Germany), did the survey on chronotype and gave their consent that these data can be used for a scientific study. Age groups were coded into 5-year bins. Mean age (mean ± SD) was 28.2 ± 17.5 years. There were 8075 females (54%) and 6912 males in the sample. The German version of the rMEQ (reduced Morningness-Eveningness-Questionnaire) was used for data collection. The data showed clear age effects. Younger children are more morning oriented and become rapidly evening oriented during puberty, while the more attenuated turn towards morningness occurs from the age of 20 years. Then between the ages 25 to 30 morningness-eveningness remained rather stable. Significant gender differences existed in the reproductive age, i.e., the age groups 20 to 50 (corresponding to the age 16–50 years). In other age groups, no gender differences could be detected. Seasonal effects were also found. Chronotype score was lowest during the summer months (and more evening oriented). Based on the single item analysis of the five questions of the rMEQ, we found age group differences in all items. Gender differences occurred in all items except item 1, which deals with the preferred wake-up time. Men always scored significantly lower (i.e. more evening oriented) than women except in item 2 (tiredness after awakening). Seasonal effects were only significant in item 3, which is related to preferred bed times. People showed a later bed time preference during summer. The classification of chronotypes according to the cut-off scores provided by Adan and Almirall (1991) and by using the 20/80 percentile provided identical cut-off scores (values of 11 and below for evening types and 18 and above for morning types).
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spelling pubmed-51337332016-12-12 Morningness-eveningness in a large sample of German adolescents and adults Randler, Christoph Freyth-Weber, Katharina Rahafar, Arash Florez Jurado, Andrea Kriegs, Jan Ole Heliyon Article People differ in their sleep-wake behavior. This individual difference is conceptualized in different aspects, such as wake up times, bed times, times of peak performance, as well as in morning affect. A total of 14,987 visitors of an exhibition in the LWL State Museum of Natural History, Münster (Germany), did the survey on chronotype and gave their consent that these data can be used for a scientific study. Age groups were coded into 5-year bins. Mean age (mean ± SD) was 28.2 ± 17.5 years. There were 8075 females (54%) and 6912 males in the sample. The German version of the rMEQ (reduced Morningness-Eveningness-Questionnaire) was used for data collection. The data showed clear age effects. Younger children are more morning oriented and become rapidly evening oriented during puberty, while the more attenuated turn towards morningness occurs from the age of 20 years. Then between the ages 25 to 30 morningness-eveningness remained rather stable. Significant gender differences existed in the reproductive age, i.e., the age groups 20 to 50 (corresponding to the age 16–50 years). In other age groups, no gender differences could be detected. Seasonal effects were also found. Chronotype score was lowest during the summer months (and more evening oriented). Based on the single item analysis of the five questions of the rMEQ, we found age group differences in all items. Gender differences occurred in all items except item 1, which deals with the preferred wake-up time. Men always scored significantly lower (i.e. more evening oriented) than women except in item 2 (tiredness after awakening). Seasonal effects were only significant in item 3, which is related to preferred bed times. People showed a later bed time preference during summer. The classification of chronotypes according to the cut-off scores provided by Adan and Almirall (1991) and by using the 20/80 percentile provided identical cut-off scores (values of 11 and below for evening types and 18 and above for morning types). Elsevier 2016-11-29 /pmc/articles/PMC5133733/ /pubmed/27957554 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2016.e00200 Text en © 2016 The Authors http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Randler, Christoph
Freyth-Weber, Katharina
Rahafar, Arash
Florez Jurado, Andrea
Kriegs, Jan Ole
Morningness-eveningness in a large sample of German adolescents and adults
title Morningness-eveningness in a large sample of German adolescents and adults
title_full Morningness-eveningness in a large sample of German adolescents and adults
title_fullStr Morningness-eveningness in a large sample of German adolescents and adults
title_full_unstemmed Morningness-eveningness in a large sample of German adolescents and adults
title_short Morningness-eveningness in a large sample of German adolescents and adults
title_sort morningness-eveningness in a large sample of german adolescents and adults
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5133733/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27957554
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2016.e00200
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