Output list
Journal article
First online publication 07/04/2026
Chronobiology International, Latest Articles, Latest Articles
The aim of the present study was to investigate the actigraphic sleep-wake and light exposure patterns of a 48-y-old healthy woman who travelled across one time zone (Italy to UK and vice versa) every two weeks for over 2.5 years (i.e. 852 night of sleep data, with 80% of recorded days retained for analysis after exclusion of travel and non-UK/Italy stays; 58% of time spent in Italy), and reported early evening somnolence and unpleasantly early wake-up time in the UK, especially immediately after travelling. She therefore started to wear an actigraph to monitor rest-activity and light exposure. Compared to Italy, UK-based recordings showed a significantly earlier midsleep (02:46 ± 01:00 vs. 03:02 ± 01:07 local clock time; p < 0.01) and more wake after sleep onset (WASO, 57.4 ± 29.7 vs. 46.5 ± 30.3 min; p < 0.001). Time spent above the 1000 lux threshold, used as a reference for outdoor light exposure, was significantly greater in the UK (92 ± 82 min vs. 56 ± 78 min, p < 0.001). Higher daytime light exposure was associated with earlier midsleep and reduced sleep fragmentation, as indicated by lower WASO. In conclusion, frequent travel across one time zone resulted in prolonged sleep-wake disturbance, with no obvious pattern of resolution after the flight.
Journal article
The bright and dark side of blue-enriched light on sleep and activity in older adults
Published 17/01/2025
GeroScience
Low indoor light in urban housing can dis-
rupt health and wellbeing, especially in older adults
who experience reduced light sensitivity and sleep/cir-
cadian disruptions with natural aging. While controlled
studies suggest that enhancing indoor lighting may
alleviate the negative effects of reduced light sensitiv-
ity, evidence for this to be effective in the real world is
lacking. This study investigates the effects of two light
conditions on actigraphic rest-activity rhythms and sub-
jective sleep in healthy older adults (≥ 60 years) living
at home. Two photon-matched lights were compared; a
control white light (4000 K) and a blue-enriched white
light (17000 K) at two different intensities (300–450 lx
and 1100–1200 lx respectively). Participants (n = 36, 25
female) completed an 11-week randomized, cross-over
study, comprising 1 week of baseline, 3 weeks of self-
administered light exposure (2 h in the morning and 2 h
in the evening), and 2 weeks of washout for each light
condition. Participants completed sleep diaries, wore
a wrist actigraph and a light sensor necklace, and col-
lected urine to measure 6-sulphatoxymelatonin. Longer
duration of morning blue-enriched light significantly
improved rest-activity rhythm stability and decreased
sleep fragmentation. More time spent above 2500 lx
increased actigraphy amplitude, daytime activity, and
advanced bedtime. Evening light exposure, however,
increased sleep latency and lowered sleep efficiency.
Our findings show morning blue-enriched light is ben-
eficial whereas evening light should be avoided. Optimal
timing of self-administered light interventions thus may
offer a promising strategy to improve sleep and rest-
activity rhythms in older adults in real-world settings.