Teenage sleep and technology engagement across the week

Background Throughout the developed world, adolescents are growing up with increased access to and engagement with a range of screen-based technologies, allowing them to encounter ideas and people on a global scale from the intimacy of their bedroom. The concerns about digital technologies negativel...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Amy Orben, Andrew K. Przybylski
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PeerJ Inc. 2020-01-01
Series:PeerJ
Subjects:
Online Access:https://peerj.com/articles/8427.pdf
id doaj-912cff3494ab4726bcc5a0b7f6df5674
record_format Article
spelling doaj-912cff3494ab4726bcc5a0b7f6df56742020-11-25T01:36:01ZengPeerJ Inc.PeerJ2167-83592020-01-018e842710.7717/peerj.8427Teenage sleep and technology engagement across the weekAmy Orben0Andrew K. Przybylski1Emmanuel College, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UKDepartment of Experimental Psychology, University of Oxford, Oxford, UKBackground Throughout the developed world, adolescents are growing up with increased access to and engagement with a range of screen-based technologies, allowing them to encounter ideas and people on a global scale from the intimacy of their bedroom. The concerns about digital technologies negatively influencing sleep are therefore especially noteworthy, as sleep has been proven to greatly affect both cognitive and emotional well-being. The associations between digital engagement and adolescent sleep should therefore be carefully investigated in research adhering to the highest methodological standards. This understood, studies published to date have not often done so and have instead focused mainly on data derived from general retrospective self-report questionnaires. The value of this work has been called into question by recent research showing that retrospective questionnaires might fail to accurately measure these variables of interest. Novel and diverse approaches to measurement are therefore necessary for academic study to progress. Methods This study analyses data from 11,884 adolescents included in the UK Millennium Cohort Study to examine the association between digital engagement and adolescent sleep, comparing the relative effects of retrospective self-report vs. time-use diary measures of technology use. By doing so, it provides an empirical lens to understand the effects of digital engagement both throughout the day and before bedtime and adds nuance to a research area primarily relying on retrospective self-report. Results The study finds that there is a small negative association relating digital engagement to adolescent sleep both on weekdays and weekend days (median standardized association βweekday = −0.06 and βweekend = −0.03). There is a more negative association between digital engagement and total sleep time on weekdays compared to weekend days (median standardized βweekday = −0.08, median standardized βweekend = −0.02), while there is no such difference when examining adolescents’ bedtime. Surprisingly, and contrary to our expectations, digital technology use before bedtime is not substantively associated with the amount of sleep and the tardiness of bedtime in adolescents. Conclusions Results derived from the use of transparent Specification Curve Analysis methods show that the negative associations in evidence are mainly driven by retrospective technology use measures and measures of total time spent on digital devices during the day. The effects are overall very small: for example, an additional hour of digital screen time per day was only related to a 9 min decrease in total time spent sleeping on weekdays and a 3 min decrease on weekends. Using digital screens 30 min before bed led to a 1 min decrease in total time spent sleeping on weekdays and weekends. The study shows that more work should be done examining how to measure digital screen time before interventions are designed.https://peerj.com/articles/8427.pdfScreen timeAdolescentsSleepTime-use diaryMeasurementSpecification curve analysis
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Amy Orben
Andrew K. Przybylski
spellingShingle Amy Orben
Andrew K. Przybylski
Teenage sleep and technology engagement across the week
PeerJ
Screen time
Adolescents
Sleep
Time-use diary
Measurement
Specification curve analysis
author_facet Amy Orben
Andrew K. Przybylski
author_sort Amy Orben
title Teenage sleep and technology engagement across the week
title_short Teenage sleep and technology engagement across the week
title_full Teenage sleep and technology engagement across the week
title_fullStr Teenage sleep and technology engagement across the week
title_full_unstemmed Teenage sleep and technology engagement across the week
title_sort teenage sleep and technology engagement across the week
publisher PeerJ Inc.
series PeerJ
issn 2167-8359
publishDate 2020-01-01
description Background Throughout the developed world, adolescents are growing up with increased access to and engagement with a range of screen-based technologies, allowing them to encounter ideas and people on a global scale from the intimacy of their bedroom. The concerns about digital technologies negatively influencing sleep are therefore especially noteworthy, as sleep has been proven to greatly affect both cognitive and emotional well-being. The associations between digital engagement and adolescent sleep should therefore be carefully investigated in research adhering to the highest methodological standards. This understood, studies published to date have not often done so and have instead focused mainly on data derived from general retrospective self-report questionnaires. The value of this work has been called into question by recent research showing that retrospective questionnaires might fail to accurately measure these variables of interest. Novel and diverse approaches to measurement are therefore necessary for academic study to progress. Methods This study analyses data from 11,884 adolescents included in the UK Millennium Cohort Study to examine the association between digital engagement and adolescent sleep, comparing the relative effects of retrospective self-report vs. time-use diary measures of technology use. By doing so, it provides an empirical lens to understand the effects of digital engagement both throughout the day and before bedtime and adds nuance to a research area primarily relying on retrospective self-report. Results The study finds that there is a small negative association relating digital engagement to adolescent sleep both on weekdays and weekend days (median standardized association βweekday = −0.06 and βweekend = −0.03). There is a more negative association between digital engagement and total sleep time on weekdays compared to weekend days (median standardized βweekday = −0.08, median standardized βweekend = −0.02), while there is no such difference when examining adolescents’ bedtime. Surprisingly, and contrary to our expectations, digital technology use before bedtime is not substantively associated with the amount of sleep and the tardiness of bedtime in adolescents. Conclusions Results derived from the use of transparent Specification Curve Analysis methods show that the negative associations in evidence are mainly driven by retrospective technology use measures and measures of total time spent on digital devices during the day. The effects are overall very small: for example, an additional hour of digital screen time per day was only related to a 9 min decrease in total time spent sleeping on weekdays and a 3 min decrease on weekends. Using digital screens 30 min before bed led to a 1 min decrease in total time spent sleeping on weekdays and weekends. The study shows that more work should be done examining how to measure digital screen time before interventions are designed.
topic Screen time
Adolescents
Sleep
Time-use diary
Measurement
Specification curve analysis
url https://peerj.com/articles/8427.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT amyorben teenagesleepandtechnologyengagementacrosstheweek
AT andrewkprzybylski teenagesleepandtechnologyengagementacrosstheweek
_version_ 1725064701876895744