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Sleep during infancy, inhibitory control and working memory in toddlers: findings from the FinnBrain cohort study.

Sleep during infancy, inhibitory control and working memory in toddlers: findings from the FinnBrain cohort study.
Sleep during infancy, inhibitory control and working memory in toddlers: findings from the FinnBrain cohort study.

Background: Sleep difficulties are associated with impaired executive functions (EFs) in school-aged children. However, much less is known about how sleep during infancy relates to EF in infants and toddlers. The aim of this study was to investigate whether parent-reported sleep patterns at 6 and 12 months were associated with their inhibitory control (IC) and working memory (WM) performances at 30 months.

Methods: This study included children whose parents filled in a sleep questionnaire at 6 or 12 months and who participated in the development assessment at 30 months (initial available sample at 30 months; N = 472). The final sample comprised (a) 359 infants with IC task and sleep questionnaire at 6 months and 322 toddlers at 12 months and (b) 364 infants with WM task and sleep questionnaire at 6 months and 327 toddlers at 12 months. Nighttime, daytime and total sleep duration, frequency of night awakenings, time awake at night, and proportion of daytime sleep were assessed at 6 and 12 months using the Brief Infant Sleep Questionnaire. IC at 30 months was measured using a modified version of the Snack Delay task, and WM was measured at 30 months using the Spin the Pots task. Further, children were divided into three groups (i.e., “poor sleepers”, “intermediate sleepers”, and “good sleepers”) based on percentile cut-offs (i.e., <10th, 10th–90th and >90th percentiles) to obtain a comprehensive understanding of the direction and nature of the associations between sleep and EF in early childhood.

Results: Our results showed an inverted U-shaped association between proportion of daytime sleep at 12 months and IC at 30 months, indicating that average proportions of daytime sleep were longitudinally associated with better IC performance. Furthermore, a linear relation between time awake at night at 12 months and WM at 30 months was found, with more time awake at night associating with worse WM.

Conclusions: Our findings support the hypothesis that sleep disruption in early childhood is associated with the development of later EF and suggest that various sleep difficulties at 12 months distinctively affect WM and IC in toddlers, possibly in a nonlinear manner.

Keywords: Sleep, Inhibitory control, Working memory, Infancy, Toddlers

2398-2683
1 - 15
Morales-Monoz, Isabel
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Nolvi, Saara
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Mäkelä, Tiina
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Eskola, Eeva
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Korja, Riikka
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Fernandes, Michelle
16d62e60-ae8e-455f-88d3-88e778253b4a
Karlsson, Hasse
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Paavonen, E. Juulia
a7681447-aede-4f2e-9f99-56fb19a10bf6
Karlsson, Linnea
af23344b-e117-43fd-acbe-e43adde4e7dd
Morales-Monoz, Isabel
d97ba37f-2c1e-4c6d-a9ac-16d3bb69b762
Nolvi, Saara
6bf8c65a-e6fd-4dcd-8260-77bc32dba451
Mäkelä, Tiina
47e56b56-166c-4842-9121-3a04750b07b7
Eskola, Eeva
ec953c64-5f9c-4c2d-a2b3-7c2bb34bbe15
Korja, Riikka
78e9dafa-820a-4d48-b854-ee38509301eb
Fernandes, Michelle
16d62e60-ae8e-455f-88d3-88e778253b4a
Karlsson, Hasse
9a063c79-c898-41cb-b203-0acd004b844e
Paavonen, E. Juulia
a7681447-aede-4f2e-9f99-56fb19a10bf6
Karlsson, Linnea
af23344b-e117-43fd-acbe-e43adde4e7dd

Morales-Monoz, Isabel, Nolvi, Saara, Mäkelä, Tiina, Eskola, Eeva, Korja, Riikka, Fernandes, Michelle, Karlsson, Hasse, Paavonen, E. Juulia and Karlsson, Linnea (2021) Sleep during infancy, inhibitory control and working memory in toddlers: findings from the FinnBrain cohort study. Sleep Science and Practice, 5 (13), 1 - 15, [13]. (doi:10.1186/s41606-021-00064-4).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: Sleep difficulties are associated with impaired executive functions (EFs) in school-aged children. However, much less is known about how sleep during infancy relates to EF in infants and toddlers. The aim of this study was to investigate whether parent-reported sleep patterns at 6 and 12 months were associated with their inhibitory control (IC) and working memory (WM) performances at 30 months.

Methods: This study included children whose parents filled in a sleep questionnaire at 6 or 12 months and who participated in the development assessment at 30 months (initial available sample at 30 months; N = 472). The final sample comprised (a) 359 infants with IC task and sleep questionnaire at 6 months and 322 toddlers at 12 months and (b) 364 infants with WM task and sleep questionnaire at 6 months and 327 toddlers at 12 months. Nighttime, daytime and total sleep duration, frequency of night awakenings, time awake at night, and proportion of daytime sleep were assessed at 6 and 12 months using the Brief Infant Sleep Questionnaire. IC at 30 months was measured using a modified version of the Snack Delay task, and WM was measured at 30 months using the Spin the Pots task. Further, children were divided into three groups (i.e., “poor sleepers”, “intermediate sleepers”, and “good sleepers”) based on percentile cut-offs (i.e., <10th, 10th–90th and >90th percentiles) to obtain a comprehensive understanding of the direction and nature of the associations between sleep and EF in early childhood.

Results: Our results showed an inverted U-shaped association between proportion of daytime sleep at 12 months and IC at 30 months, indicating that average proportions of daytime sleep were longitudinally associated with better IC performance. Furthermore, a linear relation between time awake at night at 12 months and WM at 30 months was found, with more time awake at night associating with worse WM.

Conclusions: Our findings support the hypothesis that sleep disruption in early childhood is associated with the development of later EF and suggest that various sleep difficulties at 12 months distinctively affect WM and IC in toddlers, possibly in a nonlinear manner.

Keywords: Sleep, Inhibitory control, Working memory, Infancy, Toddlers

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Published date: 2021

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 457188
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/457188
ISSN: 2398-2683
PURE UUID: 4d71e9c4-64ba-4c1f-86dc-1ce36eae1fca
ORCID for Michelle Fernandes: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-0051-3389

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Date deposited: 26 May 2022 16:35
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:10

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Contributors

Author: Isabel Morales-Monoz
Author: Saara Nolvi
Author: Tiina Mäkelä
Author: Eeva Eskola
Author: Riikka Korja
Author: Michelle Fernandes ORCID iD
Author: Hasse Karlsson
Author: E. Juulia Paavonen
Author: Linnea Karlsson

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