Authors
Angela D. Staples, John E. Bates, Isaac T. Petersen, Maureen E. McQuillan, Caroline Hoyniak
Publication date
2019/2/17
Journal
International Journal of Behavioral Development
Volume
43
Issue
3
Pages
278–285
Publisher
SAGE Publications
Description
The present study considered multiple aspects of sleep in a community sample of young children (at ages 30, 36, and 42 months) and their mothers, using both diaries and actigraphy. Through principal components analysis, 17 of 20 commonly used actigraphy variables were reduced to four main components whose variables formed composites of: Activity, night-to-night Variability, Timing, and Duration. Sleep latency and daytime sleep variables remained separate from the composites. The same components were identified at each age, and for both children and mothers. Furthermore, the sleep composites derived from the components showed greater cross-age stability than individual actigraphy variables. Finally, child and mother sleep composites were related concurrently and longitudinally. These findings demonstrate a systematic and efficient way of summarizing child and mother sleep with actigraphy variables.
Total citations
20202021202220232024791231
Scholar articles
AD Staples, JE Bates, IT Petersen, ME McQuillan… - International Journal of Behavioral Development, 2019