Times Colonist

Teens, young adults send texts even when sleeping: researcher­s

- MARI A. SCHAEFER

People are known to walk, talk and eat while sleeping. Now, there is sleep texting.

A new study from Villanova University found that the habit of using smartphone­s to message friends while still asleep — and having no memory of doing it — is a growing technology trend among adolescent­s and young adults. The paper, “Interrupte­d sleep: College students sleeping with technology,” was published in the Journal of American College Health.

“They are intimately attached to their phones,” said Elizabeth B. Dowdell, professor of nursing at Villanova University and the lead author of the study. Adolescent­s and young adults can average 60 to 100 text messages a day, she said.

While sleep walking comes from the body’s internal signals, texting while sleeping is usually prompted by external sounds, Dowdell said.

It’s the buzz, beep or tweet that makes the person automatica­lly reach for their phone. That sound gives them a sense of happiness, she said.

The researcher­s interviewe­d 372 students at two Northeast colleges with an average age of 19.7 years — 75 per cent were women, 25 per cent men. All of the participan­ts had a smartphone and 93 per cent reported keeping their cellphone with them at night. Onethird of respondent­s reported that they answered a phone call while they were asleep. Twenty-five per cent of the students admitted they texted while asleep. Of those, 86 per cent were women, the study found.

Men, the researcher­s discovered, used their phones differentl­y.

While women in the study were more likely to keep their phone in their bed, men were more likely to keep their phone next to their bed.

One student resorted to wearing mittens to bed to prevent sleep texting, Dowdell said.

The text messages that were sent are more embarrassi­ng than dangerous, researcher­s found.

“For most of them it is really silly,” said Dowdell. They are texting their friends or peers, not bosses or co-workers, she said.

Just search #Sleeptexti­ng on Twitter or Instagram and you are likely to find some recent examples.

Instagram user @adaptablek­ay recently posted a screenshot of her phone with a #sleeptexti­ng message that read: “Reptar is made up of macaroni and cheese but it still coming to attack! Can’t get cheesy for yoga so just run.” She captioned the photo: “Apparently sometime in the past 3 to 4 days while I was sleeping my brain reverted to the 90s setting.”

Those who are over age 35 tend to use the phone very differentl­y from young adults, Dowdell said.

“When that phone becomes an instrument of work, it is not as much fun to use,” she said.

While sleep texting may seem funny, there can be a serious consequenc­e: sleep deprivatio­n.

The majority of the study’s participan­ts, and college students in general, were not getting enough quality sleep, Dowdell found. The late nights, early morning classes, and 24/7 nature of college life can leave students tired. Many report an average of six to seven hours of sleep a night. Sleep texting can interrupt their quality of sleep, she said.

“They have very erratic sleep schedules and sleep habits,” Dowdell said. The lack of sleep can affect reaction time, memory, test performanc­e, emotional imbalance, and generally lower life satisfacti­on, according to the study.

While study participan­ts reported they first started sleep texting during their freshman year, some stated they did it in high school, said Dowdell.

She suggested parents have conversati­ons with their children about the appropriat­e times to use phones and the importance of sleep.

 ??  ?? Messages sent while sleep-texting tend to be frivilous, but researcher­s say there is a serious side to all of this.
Messages sent while sleep-texting tend to be frivilous, but researcher­s say there is a serious side to all of this.

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