short-sleeper

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English[edit]

Noun[edit]

short-sleeper (plural short-sleepers)

  1. Alternative form of short sleeper
    • 1991 April, Robert A Hicks, Catherine M Marical, Patricia A Conti, “Coping with a major stressor: differences between habitual short- and longer-sleepers”, in Perceptual and motor skills, volume 72, number 2:
      We compared the coping strategies of 39 short-sleepers and 33 longer-sleepers to the stresses associated with the October 17, 1989 San Francisco Bay Area earthquake using their responses to the eight scales of the Ways of Coping Questionnaire.
    • 2006, Ahuja Niraj, A Short Textbook of Psychiatry, →ISBN, page 150:
      An insomniac should be differentiated from a short-sleeper, who needs less than 6 hours of sleep per night and has no symptoms or dysfunction.
    • 2016 September, Shannon L Smith, Mary-Jon Ludy, Robin M Tucker, “Changes in taste preference and steps taken after sleep curtailment”, in Physiology & Behavior, volume 163:
      Habitual short-sleepers did not experience changes in taste perception, activity, or dietary intake following sleep alteration.