Researchers ID three key factors for waking up alert and refreshed

Not a morning person? Researchers say a three-part regimen of substantial exercise the day before, sleeping longer and later in the morning, and eating a breakfast low in sugar and high in complex carbohydrates will help you start your day more alert and refreshed.

The researchers asked 833 adults – for a two-week period – to eat a variety of breakfast meals; wear a wristwatch that would record their physical activity as well as sleep quantity, quality, timing and regularity; keep a diary of their food intake; and record their alertness levels throughout the day, starting from the moment they woke up.

In addition to identifying those three factors for combating daytime sluggishness, the researchers found that a healthy controlled blood glucose response after eating breakfast is key to waking up more effectively.

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“You can see improvements with each and every one of these factors,” said lead study author Raphael Vallat, a postdoctoral fellow at the University of California, Berkeley. “All of these have a unique and independent effect.”

For instance, higher levels of daytime physical activity – and lower levels at night – equated to more continuous and less disrupted sleep. Participants who exhibited higher levels of nighttime activity reported lower levels of morning alertness the next day.

 

A lack of alertness in the morning is more than just an annoyance, notes study co-author Matthew Walker, a professor of neuroscience and psychology at UC Berkeley.

“From car crashes to work-related accidents, the cost of sleepiness is deadly,” Walker said. “It costs developed nations billions of dollars every year through loss of productivity, increased health care utilization and work absenteeism.”

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The study was published online in the journal Nature Communications.

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