Quantitative Study of Indoor Light and Sleep Health in Elderly

Apr 13, 2026HERD

How Indoor Light Levels Relate to Sleep Quality in Older Adults

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Abstract

The light environment explained a significant 9.3% of additional variance in sleep efficiency among 116 elderly participants in Shanghai.

  • Indoor environments of participants were found to be light-deficient, lacking sufficient daytime stimulus for proper circadian regulation.
  • Age was identified as the strongest negative predictor of sleep efficiency.
  • Higher maximum daytime light exposure was linked to lower sleep efficiency, suggesting it may cause discomfort rather than effective circadian entrainment.
  • Conversely, higher maximum evening light exposure was associated with improved sleep efficiency, indicating a potential link to beneficial social activity.

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