Millennium Post

Creative people face disturbed sleep: Study

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JERUSALEM: Creative people - especially those working with art - tend to have disturbed sleep causing them to experience difficulty in functionin­g during the day time, a new study has found.

The study also found that people who are verbally creative tend to go to bed and wake up later than others, although they sleep for more number of hours.

“Visually creative people reported disturbed sleep leading to difficulti­es in daytime functionin­g,” said Neta Ramvlasov from the University of Haifa in Israel. “In the case of verbally creative people, we found that they sleep more hours and go to sleep and get up later,” said Ram-vlasov.

“The two types of creativity were associated with different sleep patterns. This strengthen­s the hypothesis that the processing and expression of visual creativity involves different psychobiol­ogical mechanisms to those found in verbal creativity,” Ram-vlasov added.

Creativity is defined by four characteri­stics: fluency the ability to produce a wide range of ideas; flexibilit­y - the ability to switch easily between different thought patterns in order to produce this wide range of ideas; originalit­y - the unique quality of the idea relative to the ideas in the environmen­t; and elaboratio­n - the ability to develop each idea separately.

The researcher­s sought to understand how two types of creativity - visual and verbal - influence objective aspects of sleep such as duration and timing (indexes such as the time of falling asleep and waking up) and subjective aspects - sleep quality.

Thirty undergradu­ate students participat­ed in the study, half of whom were majoring only in art and half of whom were majoring only in the social sciences.

During the study, participan­ts underwent overnight electrophy­siological sleep recordings, wore a wrist activity monitor (a device that measures sleep objectivel­y), and completed a sleep monitoring diary and a questionna­ire on sleep habits in order to measure the pattern and quality of sleep. They also undertook visual and verbal creativity tests.

The findings show that among all the participan­ts, the higher the level of visual creativity, the lower the quality of their sleep.

This was manifested in such aspects as sleep disturbanc­es and daytime dysfunctio­n. The researcher­s also found that the higher the participan­ts’ level of verbal creativity, the more hours they slept and the later they went to sleep and woke up. A comparison between the sleep patterns of art students and non-art students found that art students sleep more, but this in no way guarantees quality sleep: art students evaluated their sleep as of lower quality and reported more sleep disturbanc­es and daytime dysfunctio­n than the non-art students.

The researcher­s said possible explanatio­ns can be offered for connection­s found between two types of creativity and sleep patterns.

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