¶ … Sleep on Life Satisfaction and Cognitive Function Popular literature is replete with articles presenting evidence of the many harmful effects of sleep deprivation and the general consensus is that modern society works too much and sleeps too little. To be accurate, many empirical studies do exist that demonstrate the ill effects of insufficient sleep (Shekleton, 2010). Where these studies once predominantly emanated from the field of applied psychology -- in other words, from animal studies -- today the literature contains many juried articles from reputable laboratories and sleep clinics whose research is carried out with human beings ("National Sleep Foundation," 2005). The case for the physiological importance of sleep deprivation has been made, but as Groeger, et al. (2004) argues "actual data that show that society is sleep deprived do not exist." And what sleep data there is about the impact of sleep quality and amount on perceptions about life quality is based on samples too small and too particular to be representative of the population as a whole (Groeger, et al. (2004). In the conclusions of their cross-sectional study, Groeger, et al. (2004) were strongly supportive of the impact of sleep on subjects' perceptions of the quality of their lives, finding that "whether directly or indirectly, sleep indeed has a major impact how we perceive our quality...
It is of interest, and adds still more complexity to any putative involvement of mood as an intervening variable, that the data do not imply that more sleep is always better" (Groeger, et al., 2004). The current moods of subjects during their interviews were not assessed by Groeger, et al. (2004); however, the researchers did acknowledge that the responses obtained could be influenced by the moods of the subjects.Our semester plans gives you unlimited, unrestricted access to our entire library of resources —writing tools, guides, example essays, tutorials, class notes, and more.
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