What influences the internal clock?
Ambient light however does not only allow us to see, it also influences our
sleep-wake rhythm. Specialised ganglion cells are significantly involved in
this process, which – like the cones and rods – are sensitive to light and
react particularly strongly to short-wavelength light at a wavelength of around
490 nanometres. If light consists solely of short wavelengths of 440 to 490
nanometres, we perceive it as blue. If short-wavelength light activates the
ganglion cells, they signal to the internal clock that it is daytime. The
decisive factor here is how intense the light is per wavelength; the perceived
color is not relevant.
“However, the light-sensitive ganglion cells also receive information from the cones. This raises the question of whether the cones, and thereby the light color, also influence the internal clock. After all, the most striking changes in brightness and light color occur at sunrise and sunset, marking the beginning and end of a day,” says Dr. Christine Blume. At the Centre for Chronobiology of the University of Basel, she investigates the effects of light on humans and is the first author of a study investigating the effects of different light colors on the internal clock and sleep. The team of researchers from the University of Basel and the TUM has now published its findings in the scientific journal “Nature Human Behaviour”.
Light colors in comparison
“A study in mice in 2019 suggested that yellowish light has a stronger
influence on the internal clock than blueish light,” says Christine Blume. In
humans, the main effect of light on the internal clock and sleep is probably
mediated via the light-sensitive ganglion cells. “However, there is reason to
believe that the color of light, which is encoded by the cones, could also be
relevant for the internal clock.”
To get to the bottom of this, the researchers exposed 16 healthy volunteers
to a blueish or yellowish light stimulus for one hour in the late evening, as
well as a white light stimulus as a control condition. The light stimuli were
designed in such a way that they differentially activated the color-sensitive
cones in the retina in a very controlled manner. However, the stimulation of
the light-sensitive ganglion cells was the same in all three conditions.
Differences in the effect of the light were therefore directly attributable to
the respective stimulation of the cones and ultimately the color of the light.
“This method of light stimulation allows us to separate the light
properties that may play a role in how light effects humans in a clean
experimental way,” says Manuel Spitschan, Professor of Chronobiology and Health
at the Technical University of Munich, who was also involved in the study.
In order to understand the effects of the different light stimuli on the body, in the sleep laboratory the researchers determined whether the internal clock of the participants had changed depending on the color of the light. Additionally, they assessed how long it took the volunteers to fall asleep and how deep their sleep was at the beginning of the night. The researchers also enquired about their tiredness and tested their ability to react, which decreases with increasing sleepiness.
Ganglion cells are crucial
The conclusion: “We found no evidence that the variation of light color
along a blue-yellow dimension plays a relevant role for the human internal
clock or sleep,” says Christine Blume. This contradicts the results of the
mouse study mentioned above. “Rather, our results support the findings of many
other studies that the light-sensitive ganglion cells are most important for
the human internal clock,” says the scientist.
Manuel Spitschan sees the study as an important step towards putting basic
research into practice: “Our findings show that it is probably most important
to take into account the effect of light on the light-sensitive ganglion cells
when planning and designing lighting. The cones and therefore the color play a
very subordinate role.”
It remains to be seen whether the color of the light also has no effect on sleep if the parameters change and, for example, the duration of the light exposure is extended or takes place at a different time. Follow-up studies should answer questions like these.
Night mode on screens – useful or not?
We often hear that the short-wavelength component of light from smartphone
and tablet screens affects biological rhythms and sleep. The recommendation is
therefore to put your mobile phone away early in the evening or at least use
the night shift mode, which reduces the short-wavelength light proportions and
looks slightly yellowish. Christine Blume confirms this. However, the yellowish
color adjustment is a by-product that could be avoided. “Technologically, it is
possible to reduce the short-wavelength proportions even without color
adjustment of the display, however this has not yet been implemented in
commercial mobile phone displays,” says the sleep researcher.
Journal article: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41562-023-01791-7
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