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Preferential consolidation of emotional reactivity during sleep: systematic review and meta-analysis

Preferential consolidation of emotional reactivity during sleep: systematic review and meta-analysis
Preferential consolidation of emotional reactivity during sleep: systematic review and meta-analysis
Many studies have investigated whether sleep affects cognitively unmodulated reactivity to emotional stimuli. These studies operationalize emotion regulation by using subjective and/or objective measures to compare pre- and post-sleep reactivity to the same emotional stimuli. Findings have been inconsistent: some show that sleep attenuates emotional reactivity, whereas others report enhanced or maintained reactivity. Across-study methodological differences may account for discrepant findings. To resolve the questions of whether sleep leads to the attenuation, enhancement, or maintenance of emotional reactivity, and under which experimental conditions particular effects are observed, we undertook a synthesized narrative and meta-analytic approach. We searched PubMed, PsycINFO, PsycARTICLES, Web of Science, and Cochrane Library databases for relevant articles, using search terms determined a priori and search limits of language = English, participants = human, and dates = January 2006–June 2021. Our final sample included 24 studies that investigated changes in emotional reactivity in response to negatively and/or positively valenced material compared to neutral material over a period of sleep compared to a matched period of waking. Primary analyses used random effects modeling to investigate whether sleep preferentially modulates reactivity in response to emotional stimuli; secondary analyses examined potential moderators of the effect. Results showed that sleep (or equivalent periods of wakefulness) did not significantly affect psychophysiological measures of reactivity to negative or neutral stimuli. However, self-reported arousal ratings of negative stimuli were significantly increased post-sleep but not post-waking. Sub-group analyses indicated that (a) sleep-deprived participants, compared to those who slept or who experienced daytime waking, reacted more strongly and negatively in response to positive stimuli; (b) nap-exposed participants, compared to those who remained awake or who slept a full night, rated negative pictures less negatively; and (c) participants who did not obtain substantial REM sleep, compared to those who did and those exposed to waking conditions, had attenuated reactivity to neutral stimuli. We conclude that sleep may affect emotional reactivity, but that studies need more consistency in methodology, commitment to collecting both psychophysiological and self-report measures, and should report REM sleep parameters. Using these methodological principles would promote a better understanding of under which conditions particular effects are observed.
1662-5153
Lipinska, Gosia
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Austin, Holly Anne
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Moonsamy, Jasmin R.
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Henry, Michelle
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Lewis, Raphaella
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Baldwin, David
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Thomas, Kevin G.F.
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Stuart, Beth
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Lipinska, Gosia
f9d22e69-40ab-47a5-babf-3dab95c56be3
Austin, Holly Anne
800bd07e-f1eb-4393-beab-3cc54eb4992e
Moonsamy, Jasmin R.
0130828d-c805-4dd7-b937-c742add2ac2f
Henry, Michelle
aa3732b2-6f64-4588-ad09-6f2e3392f07c
Lewis, Raphaella
e4c67268-7c2f-4dc0-b933-df19d7e72f3f
Baldwin, David
1beaa192-0ef1-4914-897a-3a49fc2ed15e
Thomas, Kevin G.F.
b5f5f9ad-de97-40a5-8641-a76ffce34dca
Stuart, Beth
626862fc-892b-4f6d-9cbb-7a8d7172b209

Lipinska, Gosia, Austin, Holly Anne, Moonsamy, Jasmin R., Henry, Michelle, Lewis, Raphaella, Baldwin, David, Thomas, Kevin G.F. and Stuart, Beth (2022) Preferential consolidation of emotional reactivity during sleep: systematic review and meta-analysis. Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience, 16. (doi:10.3389/fnbeh.2022.976047).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Many studies have investigated whether sleep affects cognitively unmodulated reactivity to emotional stimuli. These studies operationalize emotion regulation by using subjective and/or objective measures to compare pre- and post-sleep reactivity to the same emotional stimuli. Findings have been inconsistent: some show that sleep attenuates emotional reactivity, whereas others report enhanced or maintained reactivity. Across-study methodological differences may account for discrepant findings. To resolve the questions of whether sleep leads to the attenuation, enhancement, or maintenance of emotional reactivity, and under which experimental conditions particular effects are observed, we undertook a synthesized narrative and meta-analytic approach. We searched PubMed, PsycINFO, PsycARTICLES, Web of Science, and Cochrane Library databases for relevant articles, using search terms determined a priori and search limits of language = English, participants = human, and dates = January 2006–June 2021. Our final sample included 24 studies that investigated changes in emotional reactivity in response to negatively and/or positively valenced material compared to neutral material over a period of sleep compared to a matched period of waking. Primary analyses used random effects modeling to investigate whether sleep preferentially modulates reactivity in response to emotional stimuli; secondary analyses examined potential moderators of the effect. Results showed that sleep (or equivalent periods of wakefulness) did not significantly affect psychophysiological measures of reactivity to negative or neutral stimuli. However, self-reported arousal ratings of negative stimuli were significantly increased post-sleep but not post-waking. Sub-group analyses indicated that (a) sleep-deprived participants, compared to those who slept or who experienced daytime waking, reacted more strongly and negatively in response to positive stimuli; (b) nap-exposed participants, compared to those who remained awake or who slept a full night, rated negative pictures less negatively; and (c) participants who did not obtain substantial REM sleep, compared to those who did and those exposed to waking conditions, had attenuated reactivity to neutral stimuli. We conclude that sleep may affect emotional reactivity, but that studies need more consistency in methodology, commitment to collecting both psychophysiological and self-report measures, and should report REM sleep parameters. Using these methodological principles would promote a better understanding of under which conditions particular effects are observed.

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Accepted/In Press date: 26 August 2022
Published date: 4 October 2022

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 493915
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/493915
ISSN: 1662-5153
PURE UUID: 975ce923-18b7-4f82-893b-f13f6299637a
ORCID for David Baldwin: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-3343-0907
ORCID for Beth Stuart: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-5432-7437

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Date deposited: 17 Sep 2024 16:54
Last modified: 18 Sep 2024 01:41

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Contributors

Author: Gosia Lipinska
Author: Holly Anne Austin
Author: Jasmin R. Moonsamy
Author: Michelle Henry
Author: Raphaella Lewis
Author: David Baldwin ORCID iD
Author: Kevin G.F. Thomas
Author: Beth Stuart ORCID iD

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