Conceptions of sleep experience: a layman perspective

Abstract Objective To date, there is little information on how lay people understand and discuss sleep in the context of daily life. Efforts to conceptualize sleep quality have been largely driven by clinical considerations of sleep disorders. As such, they are not necessarily of how normal sleepers...

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Main Authors: Maaike S. Goelema, Renske de Bruijn, Sebastiaan Overeem, Els Møst, Reinder Haakma, Panos Markopoulos
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2018-07-01
Series:BMC Research Notes
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13104-018-3584-2
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spelling doaj-faa73d5e8df1410d950535fa061917fc2020-11-24T22:06:22ZengBMCBMC Research Notes1756-05002018-07-011111510.1186/s13104-018-3584-2Conceptions of sleep experience: a layman perspectiveMaaike S. Goelema0Renske de Bruijn1Sebastiaan Overeem2Els Møst3Reinder Haakma4Panos Markopoulos5Philips Group Innovation ResearchDepartment of Human Technology Interaction, Eindhoven University of TechnologyDepartment of Industrial Design, Eindhoven University of TechnologyPhilips Group Innovation ResearchPhilips Group Innovation ResearchDepartment of Industrial Design, Eindhoven University of TechnologyAbstract Objective To date, there is little information on how lay people understand and discuss sleep in the context of daily life. Efforts to conceptualize sleep quality have been largely driven by clinical considerations of sleep disorders. As such, they are not necessarily of how normal sleepers without clinical expertise conceptualize sleep quality. A phenomenological approach was taken to understand the essence of the sleep experience and the concepts held by lay people without sleep disorders. A sentence completion questionnaire was developed and administered to a quota sample of 64 respondents who were selected aiming for sufficient representation of different gender, ages, and education levels. Results Significant sentences and meaningful units were derived inductively, resulting in a classification of nine categories. The major facets of sleep experience of lay people were ‘daytime functioning’, ‘interruptions during the night’ and ‘before bed state’. This implies that the experienced sleep quality is not only depending on the progress of the night. These results can guide future research to provide suitable psychometric measures for normal sleepers, as well as the design of sleep data visualization applications in the context of health self-monitoring.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13104-018-3584-2Perceived sleep qualitySleep behaviorHealth monitoringPhenomenology
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Maaike S. Goelema
Renske de Bruijn
Sebastiaan Overeem
Els Møst
Reinder Haakma
Panos Markopoulos
spellingShingle Maaike S. Goelema
Renske de Bruijn
Sebastiaan Overeem
Els Møst
Reinder Haakma
Panos Markopoulos
Conceptions of sleep experience: a layman perspective
BMC Research Notes
Perceived sleep quality
Sleep behavior
Health monitoring
Phenomenology
author_facet Maaike S. Goelema
Renske de Bruijn
Sebastiaan Overeem
Els Møst
Reinder Haakma
Panos Markopoulos
author_sort Maaike S. Goelema
title Conceptions of sleep experience: a layman perspective
title_short Conceptions of sleep experience: a layman perspective
title_full Conceptions of sleep experience: a layman perspective
title_fullStr Conceptions of sleep experience: a layman perspective
title_full_unstemmed Conceptions of sleep experience: a layman perspective
title_sort conceptions of sleep experience: a layman perspective
publisher BMC
series BMC Research Notes
issn 1756-0500
publishDate 2018-07-01
description Abstract Objective To date, there is little information on how lay people understand and discuss sleep in the context of daily life. Efforts to conceptualize sleep quality have been largely driven by clinical considerations of sleep disorders. As such, they are not necessarily of how normal sleepers without clinical expertise conceptualize sleep quality. A phenomenological approach was taken to understand the essence of the sleep experience and the concepts held by lay people without sleep disorders. A sentence completion questionnaire was developed and administered to a quota sample of 64 respondents who were selected aiming for sufficient representation of different gender, ages, and education levels. Results Significant sentences and meaningful units were derived inductively, resulting in a classification of nine categories. The major facets of sleep experience of lay people were ‘daytime functioning’, ‘interruptions during the night’ and ‘before bed state’. This implies that the experienced sleep quality is not only depending on the progress of the night. These results can guide future research to provide suitable psychometric measures for normal sleepers, as well as the design of sleep data visualization applications in the context of health self-monitoring.
topic Perceived sleep quality
Sleep behavior
Health monitoring
Phenomenology
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13104-018-3584-2
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