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Syndrome Cluster

Sleep Disruption

Effects of late-night use, blue-light exposure, and infinite-scroll engagement loops on sleep onset latency, total sleep time, and sleep architecture.

3 studies on file 2 peer-reviewed 1 replicating 0 contradicting / hypothesis-flagged 1 compounding platform
2

The strongest tier on file for this syndrome cluster: published studies in peer-reviewed venues whose primary outcome bears directly on this domain.

Electronic Media Use and Sleep Quality: Updated Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis

2024 Journal of Medical Internet Research
Han, Xiaoning; Zhou, Enze; Liu, Dong

Background This paper explores the widely discussed relationship between electronic media use and sleep quality, indicating negative effects due to various factors. However, existing meta-analyses on the topic have some limitations. Objective The study aims to analyze and compare the impacts of different digital media types, such as smartphones, online games, and social media, on sleep quality. Methods Adhering to Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines, the study performed a systematic meta-analysis of literature across multiple databases, including Web of Science, MEDLINE, PsycINFO, PubMed, Science Direct, Scopus, and Google Scholar, from January 2018 to October 2023. Two trained coders coded the study characteristics independently. The effect sizes were calculated using the correlation coefficient as a standardized measure of the relationship between electronic media use and sleep quality across studies. The Comprehensive Meta-Analysis software (version 3.0) was used to perform the meta-analysis. Statistical methods such as funnel plots were used to assess the presence of asymmetry and a p-curve test to test the p-hacking problem, which can indicate publication bias. Results Following a thorough screening process, the study involved 55 papers (56 items) with 41,716 participants from over 20 countries, classifying electronic media use into “general use” and “problematic use.” The meta-analysis revealed that electronic media use was significantly linked with decreased sleep quality and increased sleep problems with varying effect sizes across subgroups. A significant cultural difference was also observed in these effects. General use was associated with a significant decrease in sleep quality (P<.001). The pooled effect size was 0.28 (95% CI 0.21-0.35; k=20). Problematic use was associated with a significant increase in sleep problems (P≤.001). The pooled effect size was 0.33 (95% CI 0.28-0.38; k=36). The subgroup analysis indicated that the effect of general smartphone use and sleep problems was r=0.33 (95% CI 0.27-0.40), which was the highest among the general group. The effect of problematic internet use and sleep problems was r=0.51 (95% CI 0.43-0.59), which was the highest among the problematic groups. There were significant differences among these subgroups (general: Qbetween=14.46, P=.001; problematic: Qbetween=27.37, P<.001). The results of the meta-regression analysis using age, gender, and culture as moderators indicated that only cultural difference in the relationship between Eastern and Western culture was significant (Qbetween=6.69; P=.01). All funnel plots and p-curve analyses showed no evidence of publication and selection bias. Conclusions Despite some variability, the study overall confirms the correlation between increased electronic media use and poorer sleep outcomes, which is notably more significant in Eastern cultures.

1

Independent studies that re-tested the primary findings — successful replications strengthen the chain; failures or partial replications weaken it.

Using digital media or sleeping: that is the question. A meta-analysis on digital media use and unhealthy sleep in adolescence

2023 Computers in Human Behavior
Not fully resolved at indexing time -- Crossref will populate

Longitudinal meta-analysis specifically examining the temporal relationship between digital media use and unhealthy sleep in adolescents. Restricts inclusion to longitudinal study designs to address the causal direction question. PRISMA compliant; quality assessment via adapted Newcastle-Ottawa Scale. Finds consistent prospective association: digital media use predicts subsequent sleep disruption across diverse adolescent samples.

0

Lower-tier reports, contradicting findings, and hypothesis-flagged clinical observations. Read with the diagnostic caveats — none of these are settled science.

No studies on file for this tier yet.
1

A reader exposed to these surfaces simultaneously is not exposed to one risk source — they are exposed to all of them at once. Each row links to that platform's full cognitive-impact dossier and to the entity that owns it.

TikTok
Short-form video, algorithmically auto-served.
Owned by ByteDance
1 study