Feeling emotionally overwhelmed during times of stress and can’t figure out why? Your current sleeping habits might offer some helpful insight.
According to findings in Sleep and Affect: Assessment, Theory and Clinical Implications, a new book from University of Arkansas psychology professor Matthew Feldner and National Center for Post Traumatic Stress Disorder health science specialist Kimberly Babson, we are more likely to react emotionally to stressful situations when we are sleep deprived.
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Previous research has linked sleep loss with anxiety and mood disorders, so this additional study corroborated those results as well as expanded symptom observation beyond anxiety and depression specifically.
Struggling to sleep? Exercise can help — give these quick workouts a try (post continues after gallery).
Fast, high-intensity exercises
“Current thinking suggests the impact of sleep loss on emotion is likely very complex,” Feldner told The Huffington Post.
“One leading idea is that losing sleep impairs functioning of the prefrontal cortex region of the brain. This region of the brain is involved in complex behavior and thinking, including regulating emotional experience. Therefore, it is likely that impaired functioning of the prefrontal cortex plays a critical role in elevated emotionally observed among sleep-deprived people, because our nervous system is less able to reduce emotion once it has been triggered.”
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