New Straits Times

Sleeping well could help us feel younger

- By ETX Daily Up

IT’S often said that age is all in the mind. But a study in Sweden shows that feeling young is not just a matter of subjective perception. It’s also a question of sleep.

You may have looked at yourself in the mirror and felt as if you didn’t “look your age”.

This is because we don’t always have a clear idea of our biological age. American researcher­s have previously discovered that, from the age of 30 onwards, most people tend to underestim­ate their age.

In other words, they think they’re younger than they really are.

While this discrepanc­y between subjective age and biological age may sound trivial, it can have serious medical consequenc­es.

Indeed, the illusion of youth is associated with better cognitive performanc­e, greater life satisfacti­on and, more generally, better physical and mental health.

So what can we do to help us feel young? Is it enough to dress or talk like a young person to subconscio­usly become one?

According to researcher­s at Stockholm University, the secret could lie in the quality of your sleep. “Given that

sleep is essential for brain function and wellbeing, we decided to test whether sleep holds any secrets to preserving a youthful sense of age,” says Leonie Balter, researcher at the Department of Psychology, Stockholm University, quoted in a press release.

SLEEP WELL TO FEEL YOUNG

To do this, Balter and colleagues first questioned 429 people aged between 18 and 70 about how they felt about

their age.

They also asked them to estimate the number of nights they had not slept enough in the month preceding the study, as well as their level of sleepiness.

It turned out that, for every night of insufficie­nt sleep, the volunteers felt on average 0.23 years older.

In a second phase, the academics conducted an experiment with 186 participan­ts aged between 18 and 46.They asked them to sleep for just four hours for two nights, and then to have two full nights of sleep (with nine hours of sleep each time).

It turned out that the volunteers felt on average 4.4 times older when they didn’t get enough sleep.

The research team hypothesis­ed that the effects of sleep on perceived age were linked to the level of sleepiness people felt.

They found that feeling alert made people feel four years younger than their biological age. Conversely, extreme sleepiness contribute­d to subjective ageing. Subjects who struggled to stay awake felt six years older.

These findings, published in the journal ‘Proceeding­s of the Royal Society B’, show the extent to which the quality of our sleep can benefit or, on the contrary, undermine our mental health.

“Safeguardi­ng our sleep is crucial for maintainin­g a youthful feeling.

“This, in turn, may promote a more active lifestyle and encourage behaviours that promote health, as feeling young and alert are important for our motivation to be active,” says Balter.

 ?? PICTURE CREDIT: ETX DAILY UP ?? Researcher­s at Stockholm University have discovered that sleep affects how old we feel.
PICTURE CREDIT: ETX DAILY UP Researcher­s at Stockholm University have discovered that sleep affects how old we feel.

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