Abstract

In recent years, research has witnessed an increasing interest in the bidirectional relationship between emotion and sleep. Sleep seems important for restoring daily functioning, whereas deprivation of sleep makes us more emotionally aroused and sensitive to stressful stimuli and events. Sleep appears to be essential to our ability to cope with emotional stress in everyday life. However, when daily stress is insufficiently regulated, it may result in mental health problems and sleep disturbances too. Not only does emotion impact sleep, but there is also evidence that sleep plays a key role in regulating emotion. Emotional events during waking hours affect sleep, and the quality and amount of sleep influences the way we react to these events impacting our general well-being. Although we know that daytime emotional stress affects sleep by influencing sleep physiology, dream patterns, dream content and the emotion within a dream, its exact role is still unclear. Other effects that have been found are the exaggeration of the startle response, decrease in dream recall and elevation of awakening thresholds from rapid eye movement (REM), REM-sleep, increased or decreased latency to REM-sleep, increase in percentage of REM-density, REM-sleep duration, as well as the occurrence of arousals in sleep as a marker of sleep disruption. Equally, the way an individual copes with emotional stress, or the way in which an individual regulates emotion may modulate the effects of emotional stress on sleep. The research presented here supports the idea that adaptive emotion regulation benefits our follow-up sleep. We thus conclude the current review with a call for future research in order to clarify further the precise relationship between sleep, emotion and emotion regulation, as well as to explain further how sleep dissolves our emotional stress.

Highlights

  • The function of sleep within the realm of learning [1], memory [2], physical recovery [3], metabolism [4] and immunity [5] is well documented across species [6]

  • In order to have a good sleep quality, it has already been shown that emotion approach appears to be more beneficial in situations when the stressor is uncontrollable, whereas problem-focused coping appears to be more beneficial than emotion-approach coping in dealing with controlled stressors

  • We illustrate the intimate relationship between sleep and emotion in various ways, especially emphasizing the modulating function of sleep on daily emotion and the modulating role of emotion regulation on the interplay between emotional stress and sleep

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Summary

Introduction

The function of sleep within the realm of learning [1], memory [2], physical recovery [3], metabolism [4] and immunity [5] is well documented across species [6]. Recent research has revealed the function of sleep in regulating emotion to be quintessential [7]. The ability of an individual to regulate emotion plays a vital role in decreasing the detrimental effects of emotional stress on sleep physiology [8,9]. It has been shown how emotion dysregulation and affect are related to poor sleep quality [8]. We try to clarify whether and how this mode of emotion regulation plays a role in easing the detrimental effects of negative emotional experiences on our sleep physiology. We point to some important directions for future research

AIMS Neuroscience
Sleep-deprivation affects emotional processing
REM-dreaming as emotion modulatory
NREM-sleep as emotion regulatory?
Daily life and sleep
Emotional stress and sleep
Mediating Role of Trained Emotion Regulation
Emotion approach as experiential emotion regulation strategy
Conclusion
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