Sleep inertia, not chronotype, is a marker of circadian misalignment and a risk factor for psychiatric disorders: genetic and epidemiological evidence
Angus C. Burns(Broad Institute), Jacqueline M. Lane(Broad Institute), Tiina Paunio(King's College London), Samuel E. Jones(University of Helsinki), Daniel P. Windred(Flinders University), Andrew R. Wood(University of Exeter), Iyas Daghlas(University of California, San Francisco), Richa Saxena(Broad Institute), Katri Kantojärvi(University of Helsinki), Martin K. Rutter(University of Manchester), Hanna M. Ollila(Broad Institute), Jonathan K. Pritchard(Stanford University), Teemu Palviainen(University of Helsinki), Miriam S. Udler(Broad Institute), Hassan S. Dashti(Massachusetts General Hospital), Andrew J. K. Phillips(Adelaide Institute for Sleep Health), S. Cain(Monash University), Jaakko Kaprio(University of Helsinki), Michael N. Weedon(University of Exeter), Nasa Sinnott-Armstrong(University of Washington)
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