BACKGROUND: Sleep is intricately tied to emotional well-being, yet little is known about the reciprocal links between sleep and psychosocial experiences in the context of daily life.
Research gap analysis derived from 3 psychology papers in our local library.
The gap
BACKGROUND: Sleep is intricately tied to emotional well-being, yet little is known about the reciprocal links between sleep and psychosocial experiences in the context of daily life.
Consensus across the literature
Clustered from 3 gap mentions across 3 papers via embedding cosine ≥ 0.62.
Research trend
Established — well-defined area with open sub-problems.
Supporting evidence — 3 representative gaps
- The sleeping brain and the neural basis of emotions (2012) · doi
In addition to active wake, emotions are generated and experienced in a variety of functionally different states such as those of sleep, during which external stimulation and cognitive control are lacking.
Keywords: addition active wake emotions generated experienced variety functionally different states sleep external stimulation cognitive control - Bidirectional, Temporal Associations of Sleep with Positive Events, Affect, and Stressors in Daily Life Across a Week (2017) · doi
BACKGROUND: Sleep is intricately tied to emotional well-being, yet little is known about the reciprocal links between sleep and psychosocial experiences in the context of daily life.
Keywords: sleep background intricately tied emotional well little known reciprocal links psychosocial experiences context daily life - Affective recovery from stress and its associations with sleep (2020) · doi
Studies have linked sleep with people's ability to regulate their emotions in response to stressful events, yet little is known specifically about how sleep is related to a person's ability to recover affectively from a stressful experience.
Keywords: sleep ability stressful linked people regulate emotions response events little known specifically related person recover
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