Past research has
consistently found that evening-types typically report poorer academic
adjustment and higher levels of substance use compared to morning-types. An important
development within the morningness-eveningness and psychosocial adjustment
literature has been the hypothesis that social jetlag (i.e. the asynchrony
between an individual's "biological" and "social" clocks)
is one factor that may explain why evening-types are at a greater risk for
negative psychosocial adjustment.
Yet, only a handful of studies have assessed
social jetlag. Furthermore, the few studies that have assessed social jetlag
have done so only with concurrent data, and thus have not been able to
determine the direction of effects among morningness-eveningness, social jetlag
and psychosocial adjustment. To address this important gap in the literature,
the present 3-year longitudinal study employed the use of a cross-lagged
auto-regressive model to specifically examine the predictive role of perceived
morningness-eveningness and social jetlag on two important indices of
psychosocial adjustment among university students: academic adjustment and
substance use. We also assessed whether there would be an indirect effect
between perceived morningness-eveningness and psychosocial adjustment through
social jetlag.
Participants were 942 (71.5% female; M = 19 years, SD = 0.90)
undergraduates at a mid-sized university in Southern Ontario, Canada, who completed
a survey at three assessments, each one year apart, beginning in first-year
university. Measures were demographics (age, gender and parental education),
sleep problems, perceived morningness-eveningness, social jetlag, academic
adjustment and substance use.
As hypothesized, results of path analyses
indicated that a greater perceived eveningness preference significantly
predicted higher social jetlag, poorer academic adjustment and higher substance
use over time. In contrast, we found no support for social jetlag as a
predictor of academic adjustment and substance use, indicating that social
jetlag did not explain the link between perceived morningness-eveningness and
negative psychosocial adjustment. An important finding was the significant
predictive effect of higher substance use on social jetlag over time.
Results
of the present study highlight the importance of employing a longitudinal
framework within which to specifically determine the direction of effects among
the study variables in order to validate proposed theoretical models that aim
to guide our understanding of how perceived morningness-eveningness, social
jetlag, academic adjustment and substance use relate to each other.
Purchase full article at: http://goo.gl/OGcWch
By: Tavernier R1, Munroe M2, Willoughby T3.
- 1School of Education and Social Policy, Northwestern University , Evanston , IL , USA and.
- 2University of Toronto , Toronto , Canada , and.
- 3Department of Psychology , Brock University , St. Catharines, Ontario , Canada.
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