Stable Bedtime Boosts Kids’ Behavior and Emotional Control

Summary: Children with regular bedtimes exhibit better emotional control and behavior than those with irregular sleep patterns. Researchers found that consistency in sleep times helps children handle stress and regulate their actions more effectively. The study tracked 143 six-year-olds, showing that children with more stable bedtime routines displayed fewer signs of impulsivity.

Findings underscore the benefits of “responsive parenting” and a structured bedtime, which correlate with improved behavioral outcomes even years later. Regular bedtimes may contribute to healthier weight and better self-regulation in children.

Key Facts:

  • Children with consistent bedtimes show better self-regulation and emotional control.
  • Irregular sleep schedules correlate with increased impulsivity and stress reactivity.
  • Responsive parenting practices, including set bedtimes, support positive long-term behaviors.

Source: Penn State

Sleep can affect a child’s attitude and behavior, as many parents can attest, but a consistent bedtime may be more influential than sleep quality or duration, according to a new publication authored by researchers in the Penn State College of Health and Human Development and Penn State College of Medicine.

The study, published Nov. 8 in the Journal of Developmental and Behavioral Pediatrics, showed that children who followed a consistent bedtime routine and fell asleep at the same time each night displayed better control of their emotions and behavior when they were under stress or working with others.

Children in the study wore a monitor on their wrist for seven days to measure their nighttime sleep and activity. Credit: Neuroscience News

Adwoa Dadzie, doctoral student in biobehavioral health, and Orfeu Buxton, the Elizabeth Fenton Susman Professor of Biobehavioral Health and Dadzie’s doctoral adviser, led a team who analyzed sleep and behavior data from 143 six-year-old children in the Penn State Intervention Nurses Start Infants Growing on Healthy Trajectories (INSIGHT) study.

When children in the longitudinal INSIGHT study were newborns, their mothers received training in responsive parenting, which involves responding to a child’s emotional and physical needs in a warm, timely and consistent manner.

Penn State researchers previously found that responsive parenting training in infancy and early childhood can help promote healthy sleep and reduce childhood obesity. This new analysis from the study, according to Dadzie, demonstrates continued benefits of regular sleep timing.

“Children who had consistent bedtimes were generally able to regulate their behavior and emotions,” Dadzie said. “On the other hand, children whose bedtimes and sleep times were all over the place showed more impulsivity and less control.”

Understanding how sleep affects child behavior

Children in the study wore a monitor on their wrist for seven days to measure their nighttime sleep and activity. The devices monitored multiple aspects of sleep — time the child fell asleep, time the child woke in the morning, the midpoint of sleep timing, how efficiently the child remained asleep and the total amount of sleep the child got each night.

These data were compared to the child’s performance on a task designed to see how they responded to frustration. Each child selected a toy that they wanted to play with from a large selection. The chosen toy was placed in a clear box and locked. The child was given a set of keys, none of which unlocked the box.

The researchers then observed the child for self-regulated behavior — including self-talk and trying each key — and a lack of self-regulation — including throwing the keys without trying them all. After four minutes, the researchers returned with a working key and allowed the child to play with the toy.

The researchers also watched the children decorate a picture frame with their parents. Children’s behavior was identified as prosocial if they engaged in cooperative activities like sharing and cooperation or antisocial if they destroyed craft supplies or talked back to their parents.

Results showed that the more a child’s bedtime varied each night, the worse they regulated their behavior and emotions. For example, a child whose bedtime varied by 20 minutes a night over the week of the study typically displayed more self-regulation than a child whose bedtime varied by two hours across the week.

“It’s amazing,” said Buxton, a Social Science Research Institute co-funded faculty member.

“Parenting matters. When parents establish clear structures and respond to their child’s needs appropriately, children have better outcomes in weight regulation and behavior — even years later.”

Responsive parenting: Lower BMI, better control of behavior and emotions

Between 2012 and 2014, researchers in the INSIGHT study recruited families with firstborn infants for a childhood-obesity-prevention intervention. Participants were divided into two groups: a control group that received information about child safety and an intervention group that received information about responsive parenting.

Parents in the responsive parenting group were educated on how to respond to infant behavior states like fussiness; alertness, which includes feeding and interactive play; drowsiness; and sleeping.

Through the first three years of their lives, children in the responsive parenting group had lower body mass indices (BMIs) than children in the control group.

The program content did not exclusively focus on weight; parents learned to recognize their child’s hunger and satiety signs, to allow their child to decide when the child was full, and — later in the child’s development — to establish routines and expectations around food, sleep and behavior regulation.

When children in the INSIGHT study were six years old, they returned to the College of Medicine for more evaluation. The current study on bedtime and behavior used data from that visit.

“The results clearly indicated that sleep regularity is important for prosocial and age-appropriate behavior in children” Dadzie said.

The researchers said that some parents — those who work evenings for example — might not be able to participate in a bedtime routine with their children, but those parents can still take steps to parent more responsively.

“Every parent can establish clear standards and routines for their children,” Buxton said.

“They can respond appropriately and promptly to children’s needs. We now have eight years of research on the INSIGHT project demonstrating that when parents are responsive to their children, they raise healthier children.”

Lindsay Master, data scientist in biobehavioral health at Penn State; Emily Hohman, associate research professor in the Penn State Center for Childhood Obesity Research;  Ian Paul, principal investigator of the overall study and University Professor of pediatrics and public health sciences at Penn State College of Medicine; Jennifer Savage Williams, professor of nutritional sciences and director of the Penn State Center for Childhood Obesity Research; Erika Hernandez Acton, assistant professor of leadership and organizational behavior at Binghamton University; Sara Tauriello, graduate research assistant in pediatrics at Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences at the University at Buffalo; and Stephanie Anzman-Frasca, associate professor of pediatrics at Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences at the University at Buffalo, also contributed to this research.

Funding: The National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences and the Children’s Miracle Network at Penn State Children’s Hospital supported this research.

About this sleep and neurodevelopment research news

Author: Christine Yu
Source: Penn State
Contact: Christine Yu – Penn State
Image: The image is credited to Neuroscience News

Original Research: Closed access.
Associations Between Sleep Health and Child Behavior at Age 6 Years in the INSIGHT Study” by Orfeu Buxton et al. Journal of Developmental & Behavioral Pediatrics


Abstract

Associations Between Sleep Health and Child Behavior at Age 6 Years in the INSIGHT Study

Objective: 

Suboptimal sleep is associated with disruptive behaviors in childhood. We evaluate associations of mean and variability (SD) of sleep duration, quality, and timing with emotion regulation, impulsivity, and prosocial and antisocial behavior in children.

Methods: 

Intervention Nurses Start Infants Growing on Healthy Trajectories, a randomized controlled trial designed for obesity prevention, compared a responsive parenting intervention delivered in the first 2.5 years after birth with a home safety control group. At age 6 years, children wore an actigraphy device for 7 days and participated in behavioral tasks evaluating behavioral control, emotion regulation, and prosocial and antisocial behaviors.

Separate linear regression models examined associations between sleep and behavioral variables, adjusting for study group, child sex, and household income. Moderation analysis investigated whether the study group moderated relationships between sleep and positive age-appropriate behavior.

Results: 

Children (N = 143, age 6.7 ± 0.3 years) were predominantly non-Hispanic White (95%). Mean actigraphic sleep duration, quality, and timing were not associated with behavioral variables. By contrast, greater variability in sleep onset timing was associated with greater impulsivity (B = 0.85, p = 0.004) and poorer emotion regulation (B = −0.65, p = 0.01). Greater variability in sleep midpoint timing was associated with greater impulsivity (B = 0.80, p = 0.03).

The study group moderated the effect of sleep onset variability on behavior; only the home safety control group exhibited a significant negative relationship between variability in sleep onset timing and emotion regulation (B = −1.28, p = 0.0002).

Conclusion: 

Findings support the importance of consistency in sleep timing and how this may play a greater role in children’s behavioral and emotional outcomes than mean actigraphic sleep duration and quality.