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Nope.
When there’s a full moon are you more restless, finding it difficult to sleep well? If you answered yes, you’re not alone. But it’s just not true.
Even though popular belief has long held that a full moon interferes with a good night’s sleep, Austrian scientists have shown that sleep patterns are not affected by the phases of the moon.
Reuters reports that researchers with the Austrian Society for Sleep Medicine & Sleep Research examined the sleep patterns of 391 people in several European countries. About half the subjects had sleeping disorders, but no one knew the researchers were interested in the effect of the moon. “When I deal with patients with sleep problems, so many say that the full moon stopped them (from) sleeping, that even I was expecting some small difference to show up in the study,” Gerhardt Kloesch, the Vienna University psychologist who led the current research, told Reuters.
Each morning when they woke up, the participants wrote in a diary an assessment of the previous night’s sleep, including quality of slumber and the length of time they slept. They were also equipped with movement detectors so the researchers could independently measure whether their sleep was restless or peaceful.
In fact, just 8 percent of those surveyed had problems sleeping while there was a full moon, compared to 25 percent who said they had a particularly good night’s sleep on the night of a full moon. Good night, moon.
(Netscape)
Here is a link to more studies and explanations, including the whole “But tides work inside the human body too!” argument.