Are you a former participant in the SHADES study?
If you are, and you signed up to get copies of any publications that come from your data, you will receive them at the email address that you used when you completed the study. If you need to change your email address, contact us.
So far, the SHADES study has produced the following research abstracts:
Grandner, M. A., Gallagher, R., Chakravorty, S., Hale, L., Barrett, M., Schuschu, J., Khader, W., and Perlis, M. (2015). Comparing different methods of assessing habitual sleep duration for epidemiologic research. SLEEP, 38 (Abstract Supplement): A431.
Gallagher, R., Perlis, M., Chakravorty, S., Hale, L., Barrett, M., Schuschu, J., Khader, W., and Grandner, M. A. (2015). Use of mobile electronic devices in bed associated with sleep duration, insomnia, and daytime sleepiness. SLEEP, 38 (Abstract Supplement): A78.
Gallagher, R., Perlis, M., Gurubhagavatula, I., Chakravorty, S., Barrett, M., Schuschu, J., Khader, W., Findley, J., and Grandner, M. A. (2015). Short sleep duration, insomnia, and snoring associated with drowsy driving. SLEEP, 38 (Abstract Supplement): A131.
Wang, J., Perlis, M., Chakravorty, S., Gallagher, R., Hale, L., Barrett, M., Schuschu, J., Khader, W., Rana, S., Grandner, M. A. (2015). Anxiety symptoms predict short sleep duration, but only in individuals who are not “natural” short sleepers. SLEEP, 38 (Abstract Supplement): A322.
...more coming soon!
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