Understanding sleep restriction therapy a network intervention analysis of symptom- and process-level change

Authors
Publication date 04-2026
Journal Sleep
Article number zsaf360
Volume | Issue number 49 | 4
Number of pages 10
Organisations
  • Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences (FMG) - Psychology Research Institute (PsyRes)
Abstract
Study Objectives: Sleep restriction therapy (SRT) is a core component of cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia and an effective stand-alone treatment. Although a theoretical model exists, few studies have empirically investigated how SRT works. In this network study, we map how changes in insomnia symptoms and proposed treatment processes unfold during SRT.
Methods: We performed a secondary analysis of a randomized controlled trial (N = 147) in which adults with insomnia were allocated to telephone-guided SRT or a sleep diary control group. Using network intervention analysis, we estimated weekly network series: (1) with symptoms based on items from the insomnia severity index (ISI), and (2) with process measures of perpetuating behaviors, the circadian rhythm, sleep pressure, and arousal.
Results: Symptom networks showed that SRT was associated with reduced difficulty initiating sleep and maintaining sleep (ISI-1, ISI-2, weeks 1–6), reduced early morning awakenings (ISI-3, weeks 1–2), and reduced sleep dissatisfaction (ISI-4, weeks 2–4, 6), along with a temporary increase in daytime interference (ISI-5, weeks 1–3). Process networks showed that SRT was first associated with reduced time in bed (TIB) (weeks 1–6), reduced bedtime variability (weeks 1–6), and reduced risetime variability (weeks 1–4), followed by reductions in sleep onset latency (weeks 3, 5, 6) and pre-sleep arousal (weeks 3–6).
Conclusions: Symptom findings suggest that SRT immediately and directly targets nighttime complaints, while daytime complaints improve later. Process findings support SRT’s theoretical model, suggesting that SRT initiates change by restricting and regularizing TIB, followed by increasing sleep pressure and reducing arousal.
Document type Article
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1093/sleep/zsaf360
Downloads
Understanding sleep restriction therapy (Embargo up to 2026-05-20) (Final published version)
Supplementary materials
Supplementary Materials (Embargo up to 2026-05-20)
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