Communications Biology (Nov 2023)

Correlations in sleeping patterns and circadian preference between spouses

  • Rebecca C. Richmond,
  • Laurence J. Howe,
  • Karl Heilbron,
  • Samuel Jones,
  • Junxi Liu,
  • 23andMe Research Team,
  • Xin Wang,
  • Michael N. Weedon,
  • Martin K. Rutter,
  • Deborah A. Lawlor,
  • George Davey Smith,
  • Céline Vetter

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s42003-023-05521-7
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 1
pp. 1 – 14

Abstract

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Abstract Spouses may affect each other’s sleeping behaviour. In 47,420 spouse-pairs from the UK Biobank, we found a weak positive phenotypic correlation between spouses for self-reported sleep duration (r = 0.11; 95% CI = 0.10, 0.12) and a weak inverse correlation for chronotype (diurnal preference) (r = −0.11; −0.12, −0.10), which replicated in up to 127,035 23andMe spouse-pairs. Using accelerometer data on 3454 UK Biobank spouse-pairs, the correlation for derived sleep duration was similar to self-report (r = 0.12; 0.09, 0.15). Timing of diurnal activity was positively correlated (r = 0.24; 0.21, 0.27) in contrast to the inverse correlation for chronotype. In Mendelian randomization analysis, positive effects of sleep duration (mean difference=0.13; 0.04, 0.23 SD per SD) and diurnal activity (0.49; 0.03, 0.94) were observed, as were inverse effects of chronotype (−0.15; −0.26, −0.04) and snoring (−0.15; −0.27, −0.04). Findings support the notion that an individual’s sleep may impact that of their partner, promoting opportunities for sleep interventions at the family-level.