Introduction
Fear extinction memory (i.e. remembering that something that once signaled danger no longer does so) is a form of emotion regulation that is strengthened by sleep (Pace-Schott, Germain et al., Reference Pace-Schott, Germain and Milad2015), but impaired in individuals with certain psychiatric illnesses such as post-traumatic stress disorder, obsessive compulsive disorder and schizophrenia (Milad & Quirk, Reference Milad and Quirk2012). In addition to poor emotion regulation, psychopathology is often accompanied by poor sleep quality and is associated with evening chronotype (i.e. delayed bed- and rise-times) (Antypa et al., Reference Antypa, Vogelzangs, Meesters, Schoevers and Penninx2016) and sleep-pattern disruptions (Foster et al., Reference Foster, Peirson, Wulff, Winnebeck, Vetter and Roenneberg2013). Social jetlag (SJ) is a form of desynchrony between endogenous sleep–wake rhythms and actual sleep–wake timing imposed by social or occupational demands (Wittman et al., Reference Wittmann, Dinich, Merrow and Roenneberg2006). SJ is expressed as delayed sleep timing (i.e. later sleep midpoint) on weekends compared to weekdays. SJ is linked to psychopathology (Foster et al., Reference Foster, Peirson, Wulff, Winnebeck, Vetter and Roenneberg2013; Levandovski et al., Reference Levandovski, Dantas, Fernandes, Caumo, Torres, Roenneberg and Allebrandt2011), but mechanisms linking the two remain poorly understood.
Objective
In this secondary analysis of a larger study (Pace-Schott et al., Reference Pace-Schott, Spencer, Vijayakumar, Ahmed, Verga, Orr and Milad2013; Pace-Schott, Rubin et al., Reference Pace-Schott, Rubin, Tracy, Spencer, Orr and Verga2015), we extend our findings by measuring the association between SJ and extinction memory. Although sleep deprivation disrupts extinction memory (Pace-Schott, Germain et al., Reference Pace-Schott, Germain and Milad2015), little work has addressed the effects of sleep timing irregularities on retention of extinction memory. Here, we hypothesized that SJ represents a form of sleep-timing irregularity that might impair extinction memory, thus resulting in increased risk for psychopathology.
Methods
Seventy-six healthy male college students (aged 18–29) produced 7–9 nights of wrist actigraphy then completed a 2-session Fear Conditioning, Extinction Learning and Extinction Recall protocol (see Supplementary Materials for additional methodological details). SJ was determined by subtracting average weekday from weekend actigraphy-determined sleep midpoint (see Supplementary Materials for days included in averages and Table S1 for weekday and weekend mean sleep timing information). This calculation was then repeated for average total sleep time (TST). During Conditioning (occurring in the morning or evening) a finger-shock established anticipatory skin-conductance responses (SCR) to 2 differently colored lamps (CS+) but not a third (CS-). One CS+ (CS + E) but not the other (CS + U) was then immediately extinguished during Extinction. During Recall (3-, 12- or 24-hr after Extinction), all 3 CS were presented. Extinction memory was calculated separately for SCR (ERI) and differential SCR (dERI). The authors assert that all procedures contributing to this work comply with the ethical standards of the relevant national and institutional committees on human experimentation and with the Helsinki Declaration of 1975, as revised in 2008.
Results
As predicted, SJ was negatively associated with ERI (r = −.248, p = .035) and dERI (r = −.280, p = .018) (See Figure 1). These associations were not driven by time-of-day of testing or recall delay and SJ did not correlate with non-extinction memory-related reactivity (see Supplementary Materials). Greater SJ was associated with higher Morningness-Eveningness Questionnaire (MEQ) scores (Horne & Ostberg, Reference Horne and Östberg1976; r = .31, p = .007). Note, higher MEQ score indicates greater morningness, though only 2 participants qualified as moderate morning types (score between 59–69) and 1 as a definite morning type (score > 69) based on MEQ scoring criteria. MEQ was not correlated with ERI (r = −.13, p = .27) or dERI (r = −.12, p = .31). Lastly, difference in average weekend and weekday total sleep time was not associated with ERI (r = .03, p = .80) or dERI (r = .001, p = .99), suggesting the greater importance of weekday/weekend sleep timing differences versus weekday/weekend sleep-duration discrepancies.
Discussion
The present findings indicate that greater SJ is associated with poorer extinction memory, revealing one potential link between SJ and psychopathology. Higher SJ was also associated with greater morningness (See Figure 2), an observation that contrasts with previous reports that suggest evening types are more likely to experience SJ (e.g. Foster et al., Reference Foster, Peirson, Wulff, Winnebeck, Vetter and Roenneberg2013). That greater morningness did not directly correlate with extinction memory remains puzzling. Further, other studies have linked greater eveningness, rather than morningness, to impaired extinction memory-related processing (i.e. extinction generalization; Pace-Schott, Rubin et al., Reference Pace-Schott, Rubin, Tracy, Spencer, Orr and Verga2015) and psychopathology like depression (Levandovski et al., Reference Levandovski, Dantas, Fernandes, Caumo, Torres, Roenneberg and Allebrandt2011) and anxiety (Lemoine et al., Reference Lemoine, Zawieja and Ohayon2013). However, at least one study has linked morningness in males to greater neurotic-anxious personality traits (Muro et al., Reference Muro, Gomà-i-Freixanet and Adan2009) and morning-type college students report lower ratings of psychological quality of life compared with intermediate- and evening-type students (Lau et al., Reference Lau, Wong, Ng, Hui, Cheung and Mok2013). Late-night social schedules, especially on weekends, may disproportionately affect morning types by generating greater discrepancy between bedtimes on weekends and weekdays compared with evening types. Social jetlag, in turn, impaired emotion processing (i.e. extinction memory) and thus may be a vulnerability factor for poor mental health outcomes in those with morning chronotypes. Further, SJ appears to directly impact emotion processing rather than simply being a consequence of pre-existing psychopathology and late sleep timing, though further work is needed to confirm this.
Conclusions
Taken together, our observations suggest that, in young-adult male college students, greater morningness is a potential risk factor for SJ, which in turn is associated with impaired extinction memory. As both SJ and extinction memory deficits have been linked to poor mental health, SJ, expressed as delayed sleep timing on weekends compared to weekdays, may represent a particularly harmful sleeping pattern for optimal emotion regulation. Further, deficiencies in extinction memory may represent a specific mechanism linking SJ to poor mental health. Given that greater morningness was also associated with SJ, adopting greater coherence between weekend and weekday sleep timing may be particularly important for morning-type college students.
Author Contributions
EFPS and RMCS conceived and designed the study. EFPS conducted data gathering. RB and EFPS devised the secondary analysis plan and performed statistical analyses. RB, TJC, and EFPS drafted and revised the manuscript.
Financial Support
This work was supported by the National Institutes of Mental Health (NIMH R21MH090357) and the National Institute on Aging (NIA R00AG029710).
Data Availability Statement
Readers can contact the authors if they wish to access relevant materials for replication. Detailed protocols are available in the Supplementary Materials and in Pace-Schott et al. (Reference Pace-Schott, Spencer, Vijayakumar, Ahmed, Verga, Orr and Milad2013) and Pace-Schott, Rubin et al. (Reference Pace-Schott, Rubin, Tracy, Spencer, Orr and Verga2015).
Conflict of Interest
The authors have no relevant conflicts of interest to report.
Supplementary Materials
To view supplementary material for this article, please visit http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/exp.2020.26.
Acknowledgements.
Special thanks to Dr. Zoe S. Rubin, MD for her assistance with data processing and analysis.
Comments
Comments to the Author: In this manuscript, the authors examined whether social jet lag was associated with poorer extinction memory and/or evening chronotype in a sample of healthy male college students. This is a novel and interesting question, with relevance to understanding oft-noted associations between eveningness and worse psychological health. Although college students are arguably not the ideal sample for examining social jet lag as traditionally defined (see below), the manuscript could still provide a worthwhile contribution to the literature. I suggest considering the following comments/concerns:
1) More detail about weekday and weekend actigraphy data would be useful, including providing the # of weekend days available (with 9 days of data, some individuals may have 2 sets of weekend data), what weekend data was included in the means if more than one weekend was available, and the separate mean sleep timing data for both weekdays and weekends.
2) Relatedly, college students are less bound to the traditional weekday/weekend schedules (e.g., Thursday is often treated as a weekend night in terms of social activities and sleep schedule), and also have less systematically imposed early start times on weekdays (due to relatively greater control over their class schedules), raising questions about the meaningfulness of the traditional “social jet lag” definition. This may be relevant to the unexpected finding that morning chronotypes exhibited greater social jet lag in this sample (although the authors’ speculation that college schedules may be more difficult for morning-types is worth consideration as well).
3) Notably, the authors’ seemingly ignore that social jet lag in the opposite direction (advancing on the weekend) is seemingly associated with improved extinction memory. Other social jet lag papers have also ignored this issue, but it deserves discussion. Why would relative delay on weekdays be less problematic than relative delay on the weekend? In the more typical cases where eveningness and social jet lag are associated, one could argue that a delayed state is more adaptive, and thus spending relatively less time in the advanced state on weekends is a good thing. But that explanation would not seem to fit the current circumstances, when morningness was associated with greater social jet lag.
4) The authors could do more to address the lack of association between chronotype (as measured by MEQ) and extinction memory, especially given that social jet lag (which did correlate with extinction memory) was associated with morningness, which should be associated with better extinction memory based on consistent findings that eveningness is often accompanied by psychological/physical dysfunction. I wondered if it would be worth looking at whether the chronotype-extinction memory association is moderated by social jet lag—that is, in the morning-types with the most social jet lag, is there also worse extinction memory?
5) Finally, the authors could better distinguish between the standard SCR and differential SCR measures—they have the room in the Supplemental section, and it’s currently unclear how the literature views these two different approaches (whether one is more valid in certain circumstances, etc.).