A new study reports that women are more likely than men to get relatively good amounts of sleep, while still more frequently complaining about the quality of their sleep. Across the findings described by the outlets, women reportedly report fewer signs of poor sleep quantity compared with men, yet they express dissatisfaction with sleep quality more often. The coverage emphasizes a difference between how long people sleep and how they perceive or report that sleep. In other words, the study suggests that subjective sleep complaints do not necessarily match objective or reported sleep duration. Both sources frame the results as a gender-related pattern in sleep perceptions: women tend to sleep better in terms of amount, but they are still more likely to report problems sleeping or to complain about how they slept. The articles do not provide detailed methodology, sample size, or statistical measures in the text provided, but they consistently describe the same overall conclusion about higher rates of complaints among women despite better sleep quantity.