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

IF 11.3 1区 化学 Q1 CHEMISTRY, PHYSICAL
ACS Catalysis Pub Date : 2015-01-27 Epub Date: 2014-12-22 DOI:10.1073/pnas.1418490112
Anne-Marie Chang, Daniel Aeschbach, Jeanne F Duffy, Charles A Czeisler
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Abstract

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.

Abstract Image

Abstract Image

晚上使用发光电子阅读器会对睡眠、昼夜节律和第二天早上的警觉性产生负面影响。
在过去的 50 年里,平均睡眠时间和睡眠质量都在下降,对总体健康造成了不利影响。最近,一项针对 1508 名美国成年人的代表性调查显示,90% 的美国人每周至少有几个晚上在睡前 1 小时内使用某种电子产品。来自世界各国的越来越多的证据表明,使用电子产品对睡眠有负面影响。这种对睡眠的负面影响可能是由于这些电子设备发出的短波长富集光造成的,因为实验表明,人工光照射会产生警觉效应,抑制褪黑激素,并使生物钟相位发生偏移。一些报告显示,这些设备抑制了褪黑激素水平,但对昼夜节律相位或随后的睡眠发作的影响却知之甚少,这暴露出我们对这种日益流行的技术如何影响睡眠的认识还存在很大差距。在这里,我们比较了在睡前几小时阅读发光设备上的电子书(LE-eBook)与阅读印刷书籍的生物效应。与阅读印刷书籍相比,阅读LE-eBook的参与者入睡时间更长,晚间嗜睡程度降低,褪黑激素分泌减少,昼夜节律时间推迟,次晨警觉性降低。这些结果表明,晚间接触LE-电子书会阶段性地延迟昼夜节律,急性抑制褪黑激素,对于了解此类技术对睡眠、工作表现、健康和安全的影响具有重要意义。
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来源期刊
ACS Catalysis
ACS Catalysis CHEMISTRY, PHYSICAL-
CiteScore
20.80
自引率
6.20%
发文量
1253
审稿时长
1.5 months
期刊介绍: ACS Catalysis is an esteemed journal that publishes original research in the fields of heterogeneous catalysis, molecular catalysis, and biocatalysis. It offers broad coverage across diverse areas such as life sciences, organometallics and synthesis, photochemistry and electrochemistry, drug discovery and synthesis, materials science, environmental protection, polymer discovery and synthesis, and energy and fuels. The scope of the journal is to showcase innovative work in various aspects of catalysis. This includes new reactions and novel synthetic approaches utilizing known catalysts, the discovery or modification of new catalysts, elucidation of catalytic mechanisms through cutting-edge investigations, practical enhancements of existing processes, as well as conceptual advances in the field. Contributions to ACS Catalysis can encompass both experimental and theoretical research focused on catalytic molecules, macromolecules, and materials that exhibit catalytic turnover.
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