4.5 Article

Evening exposure to a light-emitting diodes (LED)-backlit computer screen affects circadian physiology and cognitive performance

期刊

JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSIOLOGY
卷 110, 期 5, 页码 1432-1438

出版社

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/japplphysiol.00165.2011

关键词

nonvisual effects of light; spectral analysis; shift work; melatonin; alertness

资金

  1. Daimler-Benz-Foundation (ClockKWORK)
  2. EU [018741]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Cajochen C, Frey S, Anders D, Spati J, Bues M, Pross A, Mager R, Wirz-Justice A, Stefani O. Evening exposure to a light-emitting diodes (LED)-backlit computer screen affects circadian physiology and cognitive performance. J Appl Physiol 110: 1432-1438, 2011. First published March 17, 2011; doi: 10.1152/japplphysiol.00165.2011.-Many people spend an increasing amount of time in front of computer screens equipped with light-emitting diodes (LED) with a short wavelength (blue range). Thus we investigated the repercussions on melatonin (a marker of the circadian clock), alertness, and cognitive performance levels in 13 young male volunteers under controlled laboratory conditions in a balanced crossover design. A 5-h evening exposure to a white LED-backlit screen with more than twice as much 464 nm light emission {irradiance of 0,241 Watt/(steradian X m(2)) [W/(sr X m(2))], 2.1 X 10(13) photons/(cm(2) X s), in the wavelength range of 454 and 474 nm} than a white non-LED-backlit screen [ irradiance of 0,099 W/(sr X m(2)), 0.7 X 10(13) photons/(cm(2) X s), in the wavelength range of 454 and 474 nm] elicited a significant suppression of the evening rise in endogenous melatonin and subjective as well as objective sleepiness, as indexed by a reduced incidence of slow eye movements and EEG low-frequency activity (1-7 Hz) in frontal brain regions. Concomitantly, sustained attention, as determined by the GO/NOGO task; working memory/attention, as assessed by explicit timing; and declarative memory performance in a word-learning paradigm were significantly enhanced in the LED-backlit screen compared with the non-LED condition. Screen quality and visual comfort were rated the same in both screen conditions, whereas the non-LED screen tended to be considered brighter. Our data indicate that the spectral profile of light emitted by computer screens impacts on circadian physiology, alertness, and cognitive performance levels. The challenge will be to design a computer screen with a spectral profile that can be individually programmed to add timed, essential light information to the circadian system in humans.

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