“…Decades of research have identified several key risk factors for suicide, including past psychiatric disorders, such as depression (Chesney et al., 2014), past self‐harm behavior, suicide cognitions (Chan et al., 2016), and different sociodemographic factors, such as being middle‐aged (Berkelmans et al., 2021). Research has also identified more distal population‐wide risk factors associated with increased risk for suicidal behavior, including economic turmoil (Turecki & Brent, 2016), and seasonality (Freichel & O’Shea, 2023), with increases in deaths by suicide in spring (Christodoulou et al., 2012). In particular, the field has gained a better understanding of explicit cognitions (e.g., negative affect, Gee et al., 2020) and psychophysiological processes (e.g., sleep, Brüdern et al., 2022) in their prediction of daily self‐harm behavior and suicide cognitions, thanks to the modern‐day abundance of smartphones and the associated popularity of ecological momentary assessment in suicide research (Kleiman et al., 2017).…”