Abstract

Sufficient sleep with minimal interruption during the circadian/biological night supports daytime cognition and emotional regulation. Conversely, disrupted sleep involving significant nocturnal wakefulness leads to cognitive and behavioral dysregulation. Most studies to-date have examined how fragmented or insufficient sleep affects next-day functioning, but recent work highlights changes in cognition and behavior that occur when someone is awake during the night. This review summarizes the evidence for day-night alterations in maladaptive behaviors, including suicide, violent crime, and substance use, and examines how mood, reward processing, and executive function differ during nocturnal wakefulness. Based on this evidence, we propose the Mind after Midnight hypothesis in which attentional biases, negative affect, altered reward processing, and prefrontal disinhibition interact to promote behavioral dysregulation and psychiatric disorders.

Highlights

  • Circadian rhythms influence human physiology and behavior, promoting wakefulness and cognition during the day and reducing cortical activity for sleep at night

  • Disrupted sleep increases the risk for incident and worsening psychiatric illness (Pigeon et al, 2012; Li et al, 2016; Hertenstein et al, 2019; Zhang et al, 2019; Freeman et al, 2020), and this risk may partially derive from nocturnal wakefulness, which we define as being awake during the circadian or biological night

  • This review examines the evidence for a nocturnal propensity for dysregulated behavior, explores neurophysiological changes that may facilitate such behavior, and presents the Mind After Midnight hypothesis that postulates that nocturnal wakefulness-associated changes in attentional biases, affective regulation, reward processing, and executive functioning set the stage for dysregulated behaviors and psychiatric disorders

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Circadian rhythms influence human physiology and behavior, promoting wakefulness and cognition during the day and reducing cortical activity for sleep at night. Disrupted sleep increases the risk for incident and worsening psychiatric illness (Pigeon et al, 2012; Li et al, 2016; Hertenstein et al, 2019; Zhang et al, 2019; Freeman et al, 2020), and this risk may partially derive from nocturnal wakefulness, which we define as being awake during the circadian or biological night. Cognitive capacity and mood regulation are diminished and “reason sleeps” (Perlis et al, 2016b), probably due to both intrinsic sleep loss and circadian rhythm influences. This review examines the evidence for a nocturnal propensity for dysregulated behavior, explores neurophysiological changes that may facilitate such behavior, and presents the Mind After Midnight hypothesis that postulates that nocturnal wakefulness-associated changes in attentional biases, affective regulation, reward processing, and executive functioning set the stage for dysregulated behaviors and psychiatric disorders

The Mind After Midnight
Violent Behavior
Alcohol and Other Substance Use
Food Intake
NOCTURNAL CHANGES IN THE BRAIN
Synapses and Neurotransmitters
Positive and Negative Affect
Reward Processing
Executive Function
The Hypothesis
Future Directions
Findings
AUTHOR CONTRIBUTIONS
Full Text
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