Bedtime Story

Student wide awake in bed at night texting

Here鈥檚 an easy math problem with a challenging solution: The average young adult needs nearly nine hours of sleep per night to ensure physical, mental and emotional well-being.

The average college student gets just six-and-a-half hours of sleep per night. In case you’re too tired to do the math, that adds up to 17.5 hours of lost sleep in just one week. Not good.

These numbers are the result of research by , professor of human development and family science in the College of Health Sciences, and several colleagues. Other researchers have found that 25 percent of college students get fewer than six hours of sleep per night. If that statistic holds true at 911爆料, nearly 3,700 undergraduates are stumbling sleepily through their days.

The FOMO Dilemma

A 2016 study by Adams鈥 team indicates that the problem is getting worse, thanks in large part to mobile phones. Students鈥 compulsive cell phone use, triggered largely by FOMO (Fear of Missing Out), is a major sleep stealer, the researchers reported.

鈥淪tudents are sleep deprived in part due to their phones and not wanting to miss important calls or texts from friends or parents. They fear that someone will need them and they won鈥檛 be available,鈥 said Adams, who founded 911爆料鈥檚 Sleep Research Lab.

Study participants reported sleeping with cell phones under their pillows or otherwise within reach and responding to every jingle or jiggle. Such scenarios lead to the phenomenon of 鈥渟leep texting,鈥 in which barely alert students respond to text messages. Adams said weary students report dozing off in class or struggling to stay awake to study.

鈥淚t鈥檚 normal, even a badge of courage, for this population to be sleep deprived,鈥 said Warren Schwartz, a psychotherapist in 911爆料鈥檚 Counseling Center who employs Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for insomnia, a well-tested, highly effective approach.

Sleep Deprivation

Sleep Study Stats

  • 96% of students in one group reported keeping a cell phone within arm’s reach at night*
  • 85% of students in a second group reported keeping a cell phone within arm’s reach at night*
  • 47% of students reported night-time waking to answer text messages**
  • 40% of students reported night-time waking to answer phone calls**

A Weighty Matter

Adequate sleep is necessary for neurons in your brain鈥攁nd muscles and tissues throughout your body鈥攖o repair themselves. A good night鈥檚 sleep allows you to complete rigorous classwork, take part in sports or exercise, and remain resilient in the face of the emotional ups and downs of college life.

Sleep deprivation also can have lasting consequences. It diminishes cognitive functioning, raises the risk of depression and anxiety, increases risk-taking behaviors, and affects weight and appetite. Research by , professor of nutrition sciences in the College of Health Sciences and director of the , have explored the link between sleep deprivation and weight gain.

鈥淲e (and others) have found that sleep deprivation can shift hormones that regulate appetite, how your body metabolizes food and balances energy. This, in turn, can lead to excess calorie intake, along with dietary choices that are higher in added sugars, sodium and fats,鈥 Melanson said.

Although a person expends more calories when awake than during sleep, someone who is sleep deprived tends to take in excess calories and has less tolerance for exercise. 鈥淭he caloric overage is usually stored as fat. Indeed, studies have shown that sleep-deprived individuals often have higher BMI and body fat,鈥 she said.

Not surprisingly, lack of sleep can impact academic performance. Schwartz said research published in 2010 has shown that students who report poor sleep quality have lower GPAs and leads to the reasonable conclusion that students with poor sleep quality may be more likely to drop out of school than their well-rested peers.

Some barriers to a good night鈥檚 sleep can come from the college environment鈥攁 noisy dorm, a roommate who keeps a light on. But insomnia on college campuses is often voluntary, given the pressure to forgo sleep and socialize in person with new friends or electronically with old ones. And once your body gets used to odd hours, your sleep schedule is disrupted and rest is hard to come by.

Creative Solutions

Cognitive Behavioral Therapy can help ease insomnia, the most common sleep disorder, in a matter of weeks, Schwartz said. The treatment begins, perhaps counter-intuitively, by restricting sleep. 鈥淧eople with insomnia spend too much time in bed trying to sleep. They are trying to control something they can鈥檛 control. Sleep will come when your body is ready,鈥 he said.

Schwartz restricts students to about five hours of sleep in order to build 鈥渟leep drive鈥 and to break the cycle and association between the bed and lying awake. The sleep restriction can be tweaked depending on how the student responds, and if it is successful, Schwartz increases the sleep quota slowly over a few weeks.

The next step is 鈥渟timulus control.鈥 If students cannot fall asleep quickly or they waken in the middle of the night, Schwartz instructs them to get out bed and do something relaxing, rather than tossing and turning or checking the clock repeatedly. 鈥淭he bed can become a battleground instead of a place of peace,鈥 Schwartz said. 鈥淲e want the client to come to associate the bed with being asleep rather than a place of frustration, anxiety, and wakefulness.鈥

Finally, he works with students to improve so-called sleep hygiene, avoiding alcohol, caffeine, and heavy meals at night, winding down before bedtime, and exercising during the day.

The Next Einstein?

Quality sleep also ushers you into dreamland, which has its own benefits. Dreams, even nightmares, enable you to make sense of the waking world, Adams said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 your mind helping you prepare. It seems scary in the moment, but it鈥檚 something really helpful and protective,鈥 she explained.

Research featured in a recent article in The Atlantic explained how your brain actually solves problems and creates 鈥淓ureka!鈥 moments while you snooze, which it can鈥檛 do when you are awake. Your brain needs to cycle through sleep stages to work out seemingly dissimilar patterns, make connections between neurons and tap into creative problem-solving.

Need proof? Mary Shelley conceived of “Frankenstein” in her sleep; “Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde” came to life while Robert Louis Stevenson was sound asleep; Albert Einstein literally dreamed of the theory of relativity.

So the last thing you should do if you want to ace an exam, solve a tough math equation or write a stellar essay is to skimp on rest. 鈥淪tudents think the best strategy is to cram,鈥 Adams said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 the worst. You need sleep so your mind can put all the pieces of the puzzle together.鈥


*Murdock, K.K., Adams, S.K., Crichlow-Ball, C., Horissian, M. & Roberts, M. (2017, online). Nighttime notifications and compulsivity illuminate the link between emerging adults鈥 cellphone use and sleep-related problems.Psychology of Popular Media Culture.

**Adams, S.K. & Kisler, T. (2013). Sleep quality as a mediator between technology-related sleep quality, depression, and anxiety. Cyberpsychology, Behavior, and Social Networking.