Natasha Yan Chi Tung

ORCID: 0000-0002-4553-5055
Publications
Citations
Views
---
Saved
---
About
Contact & Profiles
Research Areas
  • Sleep and related disorders
  • Resilience and Mental Health
  • Sleep and Work-Related Fatigue
  • Sleep and Wakefulness Research
  • Child and Adolescent Psychosocial and Emotional Development
  • Stress Responses and Cortisol
  • Mental Health Research Topics
  • Early Childhood Education and Development
  • Family Support in Illness
  • Physical Activity and Health

Eastern Health
2024

Melbourne Clinic
2023

Monash University
2021-2022

Australian Regenerative Medicine Institute
2021

Abstract Background Recent studies have found bi-directional relations between stress and sleep. However, few examined the daily associations electroencephalography (EEG) measured Purpose This study temporal repeated ecological momentary assessments of EEG-estimated Methods Ninety-eight international or interstate undergraduate students (Mage = 20.54 ± 1.64, 76.5% female, 84.7% Asian) reported their levels four times at morning awakening, afternoon, evening, pre-bedtime across 15 consecutive...

10.1093/abm/kaac017 article EN cc-by Annals of Behavioral Medicine 2022-05-15

Summary Habitual sleep duration and efficiency vary widely by age, gender, racial/ethnic identity. Despite growing research on the importance of night‐to‐night, intraindividual variability (IIV) in sleep, few studies have examined demographic differences IIV. The present study describes typical IIV overall demographics among healthy sleepers. Eight datasets sleepers ( N = 2,404; 26,121 total days data) were synthesised to examine identity measured via diaries, actigraphy,...

10.1111/jsr.13680 article EN Journal of Sleep Research 2022-07-10

Abstract Study Objectives Current evidence suggests that cortisol levels are bi-directionally associated with sleep. However, the daily, naturalistic cortisol-sleep associations remain unclear, as current is mostly cross-sectional. This study tested whether pre-sleep predicts sleep duration and quality, these parameters predict following day’s diurnal slope using a 15-day intensive longitudinal design electroencephalographic measures saliva sampling. Methods Ninety-five young adults (Mage =...

10.1093/sleep/zsae087 article EN cc-by SLEEP 2024-04-08

Emotional reactivity predicts poor health and psychopathology. Despite its theoretical importance, little research has tested whether coping emotional to stressors. We analyse three studies test this hypothesis for negative (NA) positive affect (PA) daily 422 Participants (72.5 % females, Mage = 22.79 ± 5.36) came from longitudinal, ecological momentary assessment (EMA) across 7–15 days (ACES N 190; DESTRESS 134; SHS 98). Coping was measured at baseline. NA, PA, stressors were assessed via...

10.1016/j.jad.2023.03.090 article EN cc-by-nc Journal of Affective Disorders 2023-04-04

Abstract This study examined whether resilience capacity moderates the association of daily perceived stress and affect with cortisol diurnal slope among relocated emerging adults. Relocated undergraduates ( N = 98; aged 18–25 years) were recruited from three groups: Resilient, Vulnerable, Control. The Resilient group required Risky Family Questionnaire (RFQ) scores ≥ 29 Brief Resilience Scale (BRS) 3.6. Vulnerable RFQ BRS ≤ 3. comparison Control 21 T-scores < 60 on PROMIS anxiety...

10.1038/s41598-022-05277-w article EN cc-by Scientific Reports 2022-01-24

Abstract Objective This study examined whether resilience capacity moderates the impact of daily perceived stress and affect on cortisol diurnal slope among relocated emerging adults. Methods Relocated undergraduates ( N =98; aged 18-25 years) were recruited from three groups: Resilient, Vulnerable, Control. Mixed-effects models used to test unique effects stress, negative affect, positive x group interactions across 14 consecutive days. Results The Resilient did not moderate associations...

10.21203/rs.3.rs-874083/v1 preprint EN cc-by Research Square (Research Square) 2021-09-20

Study Objectives: Habitual sleep duration and efficiency vary widely by age, gender, racial/ethnic identity. Despite growing research on the importance of night-to-night, intraindividual variability (IIV) in sleep, few studies have examined demographic differences IIV. The present study describes typical IIV overall demographics among healthy sleepers. Methods: Eight international data sets sleepers (N = 2404; 26,121 total days data) were synthesized to examine identity measured via diaries,...

10.31234/osf.io/yjpqx preprint EN 2021-12-17
Coming Soon ...