Journalism of Courage
Advertisement
Premium

Daily Covid-related worrying impacted daydreams’ quality more than night-dreams’, study finds

People who generally tended to worry more about Covid, also tended to have more negative dreams, a new research examining how Covid-related concerns and worries affected the emotional quality of daydreaming and nighttime dreaming in these times found

sleepingThe results suggested that daily fluctuations in worry may play a more significant role in shaping individuals' inner experiences. (Source: Getty Images)

On days when people when worried more about COVID-19, they experienced more negative emotions while daydreaming.

However, people who generally tended to worry more about Covid, also tended to have more negative dreams, a new research examining how Covid-related concerns and worries affected the emotional quality of daydreaming and nighttime dreaming in these times found.

More than a hundred participants were asked how worried, anxious, and concerned they were during the COVID-19 pandemic, in this study from the University of Turku, Finland, UK and Australia. They reported their daydreams every evening and their nighttime dreams every morning upon waking up.

The researchers analysed more than 3000 reports of daydreams and night-dreams to come out with their findings, published in the journal Emotion, about how the pandemic has shaped people’s inner experiences, having profoundly impacted the mental health of people worldwide.

They said that the emotional quality of night-dreams or experiencing more nightmares were outcomes linked more to how much a person worried about COVID-19 generally, rather than how much they worried about it on a particular day.

The results suggested that daily fluctuations in worry may play a more significant role in shaping individuals’ inner experiences during the day than during the night, they said.

“These findings do show that our experiences during the day are associated with our nighttime experiences, but our dreams seem to rely more on particular individual differences rather than what exactly happens during the day.

Story continues below this ad

“This is important because these differences may explain why some individuals may have better or worse mental health and well-being,” said Pilleriin Sikka, lead researcher of the study and a postdoctoral research fellow at Stanford University, US.

The researchers also indicated in their study a need to rely less on general questionnaires and to use more longitudinal measures capturing day-to-day variations in COVID-19 worry and inner experiences.

coThey are now conducting a follow-up study, they said, to try and understand if the pandemic may have some lingering effects on people’s inner experiences.

📣 For more lifestyle news, follow us on Instagram | Twitter | Facebook and don’t miss out on the latest updates!

From the homepage


📣 For more lifestyle news, click here to join our WhatsApp Channel and also follow us on Instagram
Tags:
  • healthy sleep Long Covid
Edition
Install the Express App for
a better experience
Featured
Trending Topics
News
Multimedia
Follow Us
Express ExplainedWhy rare earths are at the heart of a renewed China-US trade slugfest
X