sleep regression

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English[edit]

Noun[edit]

sleep regression (plural sleep regressions)

  1. (psychology) A period of days or weeks during the first two years of life characterized by a change in an infant's sleep patterns, leading to irregularities such as increased awakenings and fussiness.
    four-month sleep regression
    • 2020 April 15, Jessica Wapner, “Are Sleep Regressions Real?”, in The New York Times[1]:
      Between their input and Google’s, Smith surmised that her daughter was experiencing what many parenting books and websites refer to as a “sleep regression” — a stretch of days or even weeks where babies suddenly don’t seem to sleep or nap in the same ways they used to.