Short-wavelength attenuated polychromatic white light during work at night: limited melatonin suppression without substantial decline of alertness

May 28, 2013Chronobiology international

Nighttime work with reduced blue light: small melatonin decrease and little drop in alertness

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Abstract

Short-wavelength attenuated polychromatic white light only marginally (6%) suppressed salivary melatonin levels.

  • Skin temperature patterns remained similar under short-wavelength light compared to dim light.
  • Performance on an addition task was comparable under short-wavelength light and full-spectrum light.
  • Subjective activation ratings were lower under short-wavelength light than full-spectrum light, but subjective sleepiness did not increase.
  • Short-wavelength light may not be suitable for environments requiring high alertness.

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