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Additive Effects of Sleep Loss, Psychological Distress and Physical Inactivity on Cognitive Failures in Young Adults

Young adults frequently report cognitive complaints often attributed to sleep loss alone. However, subjective cognitive functioning is shaped by broader lifestyle and affective factors. Cross-sectional data were analyzed from 530 young adults (mean age 22.1 +/- 2.3 years) to examine the independent, interactive, and cumulative associations of short sleep duration, low physical activity, and psychological distress with everyday cognitive failures. Cognitive failures were strongly associated with sleep duration, physical activity, sleep quality, and distress in univariate analyses. However, hierarchical regression revealed that psychological distress, poor sleep quality, and short sleep durati

neuroscience