You May Sleep Less Than You Think
Study: People Tend To Overestimate Their Sleep Time
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(CBS/AP)
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Interactive Sleep Tight Having trouble sleeping? Get some dozing hints here and take our sleep quiz.
That's according to a new sleep study of 2,113 adults aged 40 and older (average age: 67).
They reported sleeping for an average of seven hours on a typical night. But they actually slept for only six hours when they spent a night hooked up to a sleep-monitoring machine at home.
The morning after the sleep-monitoring experiment, participants still overestimated their previous night's sleep time by 16 minutes. But participants were correct in estimating that it took them 17 minutes to fall asleep, report Arizona State University's Graciela Silva, PhD, MPH, and colleagues.
Self-reported sleep time may not be accurate in other sleep studies, Silva's team concludes.
Their report appears in the Journal of Clinical Sleep Medicine.
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By Miranda Hitti
Reviewed by Louise Chang
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