Circadian‑Informed Lighting Improves Vigilance and Sleep in Simulated Night Shifts

Circadian‑Informed Lighting Improves Vigilance and Sleep in Simulated Night Shifts

Type: Randomized controlled trial

Registration: PMID: 39078935

Status: Published

Tags: Cognitive performance, Light & environment, RCT, Sleep

External URL: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39078935/

Summary

Compared circadian‑informed lighting vs dim control during simulated night shifts; improved cognitive performance and sleep outcomes.

Why It Matters For Night Shift Workers and Night Owls

Participants randomized in this trial how timing and spectrum of light on shift versus before daytime sleep showed sleep & alertness for night‑shift workers and night owls. Together with other trials, it frames light as a measurable lever for on‑shift alertness and next‑day sleep, not just ambience. For people who work nights, that frames an everyday choice (when you eat, how you light the end of a shift, how rest is split) as part of the mechanism, not just routine.

Tags

  • Cognitive performance
  • Light & environment
  • RCT
  • Sleep

Notes

Lab simulation informs real‑world specs.

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