πŸ”¬ Primary Source Research

Sleep Science
Factor Reports

Two independent AI analyses of the 10 factors that most affect sleep quality β€” grounded in peer-reviewed primary literature with study citations, effect sizes, and mechanistic explanations.

Compiled February 2026 • Primary sources from PubMed, Nature, Science, PNAS • N=10 ranked factors

The Two Reports

Same primary research data. Two independent AI interpretations. See where they agree β€” and where the data points in surprising directions.

πŸ”· Google Gemini 2.5 Pro

Gemini's Analysis of the Primary Literature

A comprehensive synthesis of the primary literature β€” structured study tables, effect sizes, biological mechanisms, and ranking rationale for all 10 sleep factors.

  • Primary studies table for each factor (Author, Year, Journal, N=, Effect Size)
  • Direct quotations from landmark papers (Van Dongen, Czeisler, KrΓ€uchi, Drake)
  • Mechanistic explanations: why each factor affects sleep biology
  • Data-driven ranking rationale for each position
  • Practical implications backed by specific study data
Open Report β†’
🧠 Claude Opus 4

Opus's Independent Critical Interpretation

Opus's independent interpretation β€” what the data actually proves vs. what people think, with direct study citations and counter-intuitive findings the conventional sleep advice community ignores.

  • The Awareness Gap thesis: humans systematically underestimate sleep disruption
  • Counter-intuitive findings from the primary literature
  • Where Van Dongen, Roehrs, Drake data points beyond conventional advice
  • Independent interpretive chains: "what this REALLY means"
  • Critical analysis of self-report bias in sleep research
Open Report β†’

The 10 Factors β€” Ranked by Impact on Sleep Quality

Rank Factor Effect Size Key Evidence Why This Rank
1 Circadian Rhythm & Light Exposure
d > 1.0
Czeisler 1999; Lockley 2003 Master clock β€” all other factors operate within this framework
2 Stress & Cortisol (HPA Axis)
SMD 0.72
Vgontzas 2001; Meta-analysis 2022 Most common proximate cause of insomnia; self-reinforcing loop
3 Sleep Debt & Chronic Restriction
Dose-response
Van Dongen et al. 2003 Cumulative, dose-dependent with dangerous subjective blindspot
4 Alcohol
REM -20-25%
Meta-analysis 2024; Roehrs 2001 Severe sleep architecture disruption; REM suppression
5 Temperature & Thermal Regulation
1Β°C β†’ 10 min
KrΓ€uchi et al. 1999 (Nature) Direct physiological link to sleep onset; Nature-level evidence
6 Caffeine & Adenosine
-41 min TST
Drake et al. 2013 6h-prior caffeine causes >41 min objective sleep loss
7 Blue Light & Screen Exposure
-55% melatonin
Chang et al. 2015 (PNAS) Sub-mechanism of circadian pathway; ubiquitous exposure
8 Noise & Light Pollution
33dB threshold
WHO meta-analysis 2022; Basner 2011 Disrupts continuity; arousals at 33dB threshold
9 Exercise & Physical Activity
SMD 0.35-0.47
Kredlow 2015; Network meta-analysis 2024 Consistent but smaller effect sizes; indirect pathways
10 Meal Timing & Intermittent Fasting
Modest
Sutton 2018; Frontiers TRE review 2024 Smallest effect sizes; indirect circadian pathway

🎯 The Cross-Cutting Finding: The Awareness Gap

The most consistent finding across this literature is that humans systematically underestimate their own sleep disruption. Van Dongen (2003) showed subjects restricted to 6h/night lost the ability to perceive their own cognitive impairment β€” their subjective sleepiness plateaued while performance continued to decline. Drake (2013) showed 400mg caffeine 6 hours before bed reduced objective sleep time by >41 minutes while subjects didn't perceive it. This awareness gap β€” between actual sleep quality and perceived sleep quality β€” may be the most important finding in sleep science.

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