4.8 Article

Evening use of light-emitting eReaders negatively affects sleep, circadian timing, and next-morning alertness

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1418490112

Keywords

sleep; chronobiology; phase-shifting; digital media; electronics

Funding

  1. National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences, National Institutes of Health (NIH) [UL1 RR025758]
  2. Brigham and Women's Hospital (BWH)
  3. Harvard University
  4. NIH [R01HL077453, K01HL115458, R01HL094654]
  5. NCRR [UL1 RR025758]
  6. German Aerospace Center
  7. NASA [NNX10AF47G]
  8. National Space Biomedical Research Institute [NASA NCC 9-58]
  9. NASA [NNX10AF47G, 133663] Funding Source: Federal RePORTER

Ask authors/readers for more resources

In the past 50 y, there has been a decline in average sleep duration and quality, with adverse consequences on general health. A representative survey of 1,508 American adults recently revealed that 90% of Americans used some type of electronics at least a few nights per week within 1 h before bedtime. Mounting evidence from countries around the world shows the negative impact of such technology use on sleep. This negative impact on sleep may be due to the short-wavelength-enriched light emitted by these electronic devices, given that artificial-light exposure has been shown experimentally to produce alerting effects, suppress melatonin, and phase-shift the biological clock. A few reports have shown that these devices suppress melatonin levels, but little is known about the effects on circadian phase or the following sleep episode, exposing a substantial gap in our knowledge of how this increasingly popular technology affects sleep. Here we compare the biological effects of reading an electronic book on a light-emitting device (LE-eBook) with reading a printed book in the hours before bedtime. Participants reading an LE-eBook took longer to fall asleep and had reduced evening sleepiness, reduced melatonin secretion, later timing of their circadian clock, and reduced next-morning alertness than when reading a printed book. These results demonstrate that evening exposure to an LE-eBook phase-delays the circadian clock, acutely suppresses melatonin, and has important implications for understanding the impact of such technologies on sleep, performance, health, and safety.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.8
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available