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Morningness, Eveningness And Stress Perception In Physical Education Students
Author(s) -
Camila Thais de Carvalho Messora,
Milva Maria Figueiredo De Martino,
Maria Cecília Pires da Rocha,
Karla Figueiredo De Martino Pasetti,
Kezia Katiane De Medeiros Silva,
Soraya Maria de Medeiros
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
international archives of medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1755-7682
DOI - 10.3823/2475
Subject(s) - chronotype , medicine , stress (linguistics) , nocturnal , clinical psychology , test (biology) , perception , demography , circadian rhythm , psychology , linguistics , philosophy , neuroscience , sociology , paleontology , biology
Objective:  to identify the stress levels and sleeping habits of students from the Physical Education college during the diurnal and nocturnal periods.\udMethod: this is an exploratory and descriptive study with 103 subjects. Data were collected through the Lipp Stress Symptom Inventory and the Horne & Östberg Morningness-Eveningness Identification Questionnaire, and sociodemographic data.\udResults: The stress indexes showed 53.40% of students without stress and 46.6% with stress. When comparing gender and stress using the chi-square test, one obtained (p=0.0411), indicating that women are more stressed than men. There were 61.1% of students classified with indifferent chronotype. Among the students, 80.4% from the diurnal period were not suitable for the chronotype, as well as 74.5% of the students from the nocturnal period were not either.\udConclusion: the majority of the students did not present the chronotype adequate for the study schedule and they presented stress, being more frequent in the female group

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