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Melanopic irradiance defines the impact of evening display light on sleep latency, melatonin and alertness

  • Isabel Schöllhorn
  • , Oliver Stefani
  • , Robert J. Lucas
  • , Manuel Spitschan
  • , Helen C. Slawik
  • , Christian Cajochen
  • Psychiatric Hospital of the University of Basel (UPK)
  • University of Basel
  • Faculty of Biology, Medicine and Health
  • Max Planck Institute for Biological Cybernetics

Publikation: Beitrag in FachzeitschriftArtikelBegutachtung

45 Zitate (Scopus)

Abstract

Evening light-emitting visual displays may disrupt sleep, suppress melatonin and increase alertness. Here, we control melanopic irradiance independent of display luminance and colour, in 72 healthy males 4 h before habitual bedtime and expose each of them to one of four luminance levels (i.e., dim light, smartphone, tablet or computer screen illuminance) at a low and a high melanopic irradiance setting. Low melanopic light shortens the time to fall asleep, attenuates evening melatonin suppression, reduces morning melatonin, advances evening melatonin onset and decreases alertness compared to high melanopic light. In addition, we observe dose-dependent increases in sleep latency, reductions in melatonin concentration and delays in melatonin onset as a function of melanopic irradiance—not so for subjective alertness. We identify melanopic irradiance as an appropriate parameter to mitigate the unwanted effects of screen use at night. Our results may help the many people who sit in front of screens in the evening or at night to fall asleep faster, feel sleepier, and have a more stable melatonin phase by spectrally tuning the visual display light without compromising the visual appearance.

OriginalspracheEnglisch
Aufsatznummer228
FachzeitschriftCommunications Biology
Jahrgang6
Ausgabenummer1
DOIs
PublikationsstatusVeröffentlicht - Dez. 2023

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