A longitudinal investigation of the bidirectional relationship of sleep quality with emotional stability and social cynicism in a large community sample.

2021 
Abstract Objective Dispositional characteristics like emotional stability and social cynicism have been consistently associated with negative affect, which is a known predictor and outcome of poor sleep quality. This study hypothesized a bidirectional relationship of sleep quality with emotional stability and social cynicism over a five-year period. Methods Participants were 7,181 Chinese people, who completed two waves of online surveys from a larger panel study. Questionnaires on Big Five personality traits, social cynicism, and sleep quality were administered twice at a five-year interval. Results Cross-lagged analysis revealed a significant bidirectional relationship between emotional stability and sleep quality over five years as hypothesized. However, there was no association between sleep quality and social cynicism in either direction. Conclusion Our study provides consistent evidence of a bidirectional relationship between sleep quality and emotional stability in a five-year time-frame among a younger population (mean age = 24.86). Given the critical role of emotional stability in various areas of functioning, the findings highlight the importance of sleep health education in young adults, who are going through a critical period of personality development.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    46
    References
    1
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []