Actigraphic Investigations On The Activity-Rest Behavior Of Right- and Left-Handed Students

The aim of this study was to explore differences between left-and right-handed subjects in sleep duration. Sleep and activity patterns were continuously registered for 12 days using actometers on 20 left-handed and 20 right-handed medical students in Berlin. Handedness was determined by a modified v...

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Veröffentlicht in:Chronobiology international 2006, Vol.23 (3), p.593-605
Hauptverfasser: Lehnkering, Hanna, Strauss, Andreas, Wegner, Brigitte, Siegmund, Renate
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The aim of this study was to explore differences between left-and right-handed subjects in sleep duration. Sleep and activity patterns were continuously registered for 12 days using actometers on 20 left-handed and 20 right-handed medical students in Berlin. Handedness was determined by a modified version of the Edinburgh handedness inventory. Each participant wore one actometer on each wrist. Actiwatch® Sleep Analysis Software (CNT, UK) was used to evaluate the data, and statistical calculations were performed with a non-parametric variance analysis. A significant difference in mean sleep duration between left-handers (7.9 h) and right-handers (7.3 h) was determined (p=0.025 for measurement made on the dominant hand and p=0.013 for ones made on the non-dominant hand). In contrast, the maximal phase of daily activity (acrophase) did not show any difference between the two groups. The difference in sleep duration might be caused by either the greater effort required for left-handers to cope in a right-handed world or by structural brain differences.
ISSN:0742-0528
1525-6073
DOI:10.1080/07420520600724094