Abstract

Sleep is a fundamental biological process that all humans exhibit, and there is much evidence that people suffer adverse health outcomes from insufficient sleep. Despite this evidence, much research demonstrates significant heterogeneity in the amounts that people sleep across cultures. This suggests that despite serving fundamental biological functions, sleep is also subject to cultural influence. Using self-report and actigraphy data we examined sleep among European Canadian, Asian Canadian, and Japanese university students. Significant cultural differences emerged in terms of various parameters of sleep (e.g. sleep time), and beliefs about sleep (e.g. perceived relation between sleep and health). Despite sleeping significantly less than European Canadians, Japanese participants slept less efficiently, yet reported being less tired and having better health. Moreover, relative to European Canadians, Japanese participants perceived a weaker relation between sleep and physical health, and had a significantly shorter ideal amount of sleep. Asian Canadians’ sleep behaviors and attitudes were largely similar to European Canadians suggesting that people acculturate to local cultural sleep norms.

Highlights

  • All regression coefficients are accompanied by percentile bootstrapped 95% confidence intervals (CIs) with 5999 resamples, which leads to better estimations of confidence intervals [86]

  • The one exception was for sleepiness as measured by participants entering a score into the watch, which was analyzed using hierarchical linear modeling with the various sleepiness reporting periods nested within participants

  • Cultural differences in sleep duration than European-Canadian participants (M = 6.03 minutes, SE = 3.41 minutes; β = 0.67, p < .001, 95% CI [0.31, 1.03]), but not differently than Asian-Canadian participants (M = 17.46 minutes, SE = 4.68 minutes; β = 0.17, p = .429, 95% CI [-0.41, 0.71])

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Summary

Participants

We recruited 309 university students from universities in Canada and Japan. The Canadian sample consisted of both European-Canadians (Canadians who identified being of European heritage), and Asian-Canadians (Canadians who identified being of East Asian heritage). The raw data was inspected for obvious artifacts, such as long periods of zero movement, or abnormally high activity at unexpected times [80] As another quality check, participants separately kept a log of when they slept, which allowed the researchers to ascertain that the sleep periods indicated by the watches approximated the timeframe of their self-reported sleep periods. Participants completed the somatization subscale of the Brief Symptom Inventory [85] which indexes their frequency of experiencing various physical symptoms over the previous week For this measure, they indicated their frequency of experiencing a variety of symptoms including headaches, shortness of breath, and stomach ache or pain on a 7-point scale (1 = not at all, 7 = very frequently). Because higher scores indicate poorer health on this measure, this variable was reverse-coded during analysis such that higher score means better health

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