The widespread use of electric light and electronic devices has resulted in an excessive exposure to light during the late-evening and at night. This late light exposure acutely suppresses melatonin and sleepiness and delays the circadian clock. Here we investigate whether the acute effects of late-evening light exposure on our physiology and sleepiness are reduced when this light exposure is preceded by early evening bright light. Twelve healthy young females were included in a randomised crossover study. All participants underwent three evening (18:30-00:30) sessions during which melatonin, subjective sleepiness, body temperature and skin blood flow were measured under different light conditions: (A) dim light, (B) dim light with a late-e...
Before the invention of electric lighting, humans were primarily exposed to intense (>300 lux) or...
Exposure to light at night results in disruption of endogenous circadian rhythmicity and/or suppress...
Light can elicit acute physiological and alerting responses in humans, the magnitude of which depend...
The widespread use of electric light and electronic devices has resulted in an excessive exposure to...
The widespread use of electric light and electronic devices hasresulted in extended exposures to lig...
The effect of light on circadian rhythms and sleep is mediated by a multi-component photoreceptive s...
Evening exposure to electric light can acutely suppress melatonin levels and adversely affect subseq...
We compared the effects of bedroom-intensity light from a standard fluorescent and a blue- (i.e., sh...
Objectives: Light is not only crucial for vision but also influences other aspects of physiology and...
Life in 24-h society relies on the use of artificial light at night that might disrupt synchronizati...
Light significantly improves alertness during the night (Cajochen, Sleep Med Rev, 11, 2007 and 453; ...
A number of influential theories of sleep function argue for a close relationship between body temp...
Bright light can influence human psychophysiology instantaneously by inducing endocrine (suppression...
In the current 24-hour society, it is important to function at optimal capacity at all times of day....
Light is a potent circadian entraining agent. For many people, daily light exposure is fundamentally...
Before the invention of electric lighting, humans were primarily exposed to intense (>300 lux) or...
Exposure to light at night results in disruption of endogenous circadian rhythmicity and/or suppress...
Light can elicit acute physiological and alerting responses in humans, the magnitude of which depend...
The widespread use of electric light and electronic devices has resulted in an excessive exposure to...
The widespread use of electric light and electronic devices hasresulted in extended exposures to lig...
The effect of light on circadian rhythms and sleep is mediated by a multi-component photoreceptive s...
Evening exposure to electric light can acutely suppress melatonin levels and adversely affect subseq...
We compared the effects of bedroom-intensity light from a standard fluorescent and a blue- (i.e., sh...
Objectives: Light is not only crucial for vision but also influences other aspects of physiology and...
Life in 24-h society relies on the use of artificial light at night that might disrupt synchronizati...
Light significantly improves alertness during the night (Cajochen, Sleep Med Rev, 11, 2007 and 453; ...
A number of influential theories of sleep function argue for a close relationship between body temp...
Bright light can influence human psychophysiology instantaneously by inducing endocrine (suppression...
In the current 24-hour society, it is important to function at optimal capacity at all times of day....
Light is a potent circadian entraining agent. For many people, daily light exposure is fundamentally...
Before the invention of electric lighting, humans were primarily exposed to intense (>300 lux) or...
Exposure to light at night results in disruption of endogenous circadian rhythmicity and/or suppress...
Light can elicit acute physiological and alerting responses in humans, the magnitude of which depend...