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research article

Effects of prior light exposure on early evening performance, subjective sleepiness, and hormonal secretion

Münch, Mirjam  
•
Linhart, Friedrich
•
Borisuit, Apiparn  
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2012
Behavioral Neuroscience

In sighted humans, light intensity, timing, exposure duration, and spectral composition of light are important to entrain the endogenous circadian pacemaker to the 24-h day-night cycle. We tested the impact of two realistic office lighting conditions during the afternoon on subjective sleepiness, hormonal secretion, and cognitive performance in the early evening hours. Twenty-nine young subjects came twice and spent 8 h (12:00-20:00) in our laboratory, where they were exposed for 6 h to either artificial light (AL) or to mainly daylight (DL). In the early evening, we assessed their salivary cortisol and melatonin secretion, subjective sleepiness, and cognitive performance (n-back test) under dim light conditions. Subjects felt significantly more alert at the beginning of the evening after the DL condition, and they became sleepier at the end of the evening after the AL condition. For cognitive performance we found a significant interaction between light conditions, mental load (2- or 3-back task) and the order of light administration. On their first evening, subjects performed with similar accuracy after both light conditions, but on their second evening, subjects performed significantly more accurately after the DL in both n-back versions and committed fewer false alarms in the 2-back task compared to the AL group. Lower sleepiness in the evening was significantly correlated with better cognitive performance (p < .05). In summary, even short-term lighting conditions during the afternoon had an impact on cognitive task performance in the evening. This rapid effect was only distinguishable on the second day of training, when a difficult task had been sufficiently practiced.

  • Details
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Type
research article
DOI
10.1037/a0026702
Web of Science ID

WOS:000299491800020

Author(s)
Münch, Mirjam  
Linhart, Friedrich
Borisuit, Apiparn  
Jaeggi, Susanne M.
Scartezzini, Jean-Louis  
Date Issued

2012

Publisher

American Psychological Association

Published in
Behavioral Neuroscience
Volume

126

Issue

1

Start page

196

End page

203

Subjects

n-back task

•

working memory

•

prior light effects

•

circadian

•

subjective sleepiness

•

daylight

•

Short-Wavelength Light

•

Human Circadian Pacemaker

•

Retinal Ganglion-Cells

•

Bright Light

•

Melatonin Suppression

•

Monochromatic Light

•

Brain Responses

•

High-Sensitivity

•

Action Spectrum

•

Photic History

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LESO-PB  
Available on Infoscience
February 7, 2012
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/77585
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