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The role of objective sleep in implicit and explicit affect regulation : A comprehensive review

Straus, Laura D.; ten Brink, Maia; Sikka, Pilleriin; Srivastava, Radhika; Gross, James J.; Colvonen, Peter J.

The role of objective sleep in implicit and explicit affect regulation : A comprehensive review

Straus, Laura D.
ten Brink, Maia
Sikka, Pilleriin
Srivastava, Radhika
Gross, James J.
Colvonen, Peter J.
Katso/Avaa
1-s2.0-S2352289524000511-main.pdf (2.470Mb)
Lataukset: 

Elsevier Inc.
doi:10.1016/j.ynstr.2024.100655
URI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ynstr.2024.100655
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Julkaisun pysyvä osoite on:
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi-fe2025082786798
Tiivistelmä
Impairments in sleep and affect regulation are evident across a wide range of mental disorders. Understanding the sleep factors that relate to affect regulatory difficulties will inform mechanistic understanding and aid in treatment. Despite rising interest, some research challenges in this area include integrating across different clinical and non-clinical literatures investigating the role of sleep architecture (measured with polysomnography) and experimentally manipulated sleep, as well as integrating more explicit versus implicit affect regulation processes. In this comprehensive review, we use a unifying framework to examine sleep's relationship with implicit-automatic regulation and explicit-controlled regulation, both of which are relevant to mental health (e.g., PTSD and depression). Many studies of implicit-automatic regulation (e.g., fear extinction and safety learning) demonstrate the importance of sleep, and REM sleep specifically. Studies of explicit-controlled regulation (e.g., cognitive reappraisal and expressive suppression) are less consistent in their findings, with results differing depending on the type of affect regulation and/or way that sleep was measured or manipulated. There is a clear relationship between objective sleep and affect regulation processes. However, there is a need for 1) more studies focusing on sleep and explicit-controlled affect regulation; 2) replication with the same types of regulation strategies; 3) more studies experimentally manipulating sleep to examine its impact on affect regulation and vice versa in order to infer cause and effect; and 4) more studies looking at sleep's impact on next-day affect regulation (not just overnight change in affect reactivity).
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