Table 4 The association of sleep diary with cognitive performance metrics in Study 2.

From: The relationship between subjective sleep quality and cognitive performance in healthy young adults: Evidence from three empirical studies

Outcome

β

95% CI

t

df

p

BF01

ACC learning indices

ACC Higher-order sequence learning

−0.077

[−0.28, 0.13]

−0.749

97

0.46

7.73

ACC Statistical learning

−0.031

[−0.24, 0.17]

−0.296

97

0.77

8.09

ACC Triplet learning

−0.111

[−0.31, 0.09]

−1.092

97

0.28

4.46

RT learning indices

RT Higher-order sequence learning

−0.001

[−0.11, 0.11]

−0.025

97

0.98

9.76

RT Statistical learning

−0.205

[−0.41, 0.00]

−1.955

97

0.05

8.96

RT Triplet learning

−0.059

[−0.19, 0.07]

−0.917

97

0.36

11.28

General skill indices

ACC general skill learning

−0.171

[−0.35, 0.01]

−1.866

97

0.07

2.51

Average ACC

0.035

[−0.18, 0.25]

0.317

97

0.75

8.94

RT average

−0.086

[−0.31, 0.13]

−0.764

97

0.45

12.79

RT general skill learning

−0.064

[−0.26, 0.14]

−0.623

97

0.53

7.10

WM and EF indices

Counting Span

−0.065

[−0.26, 0.13]

−0.664

97

0.50

5.63

WCST – perseverative error

0.005

[−0.13, 0.14]

0.072

96

0.94

9.71

  1. Note: The table shows standardized regression coefficients for sleep diary scores in separate linear mixed-effect models for each cognitive performance metrics. Age, gender, and morningness score were added as covariates. BF01 was derived from BIC (see ‘Data analysis’ section for details). ACC = accuracy. RT = reaction time. WM = working memory. EF = executive function. WCST = Wisconsin Card Sorting Test.