Department of Psychology, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, USA.
Department of Neurology, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, USA.
Neural Plast. 2018 Jan 11;2018:5868570. doi: 10.1155/2018/5868570. eCollection 2018.
Circadian timekeeping can be reset by brief flashes of light using stimulation protocols thousands of times shorter than those previously assumed to be necessary for traditional phototherapy. These observations point to a future where flexible architectures of nanosecond-, microsecond-, and millisecond-scale light pulses are compiled to reprogram the brain's internal clock when it has been altered by psychiatric illness or advanced age. In the current review, we present a chronology of seminal experiments that established the synchronizing influence of light on the human circadian system and the efficacy of prolonged bright-light exposure for reducing symptoms associated with seasonal affective disorder. We conclude with a discussion of the different ways that precision flashes could be parlayed during sleep to effect neuroadaptive changes in brain function. This article is a contribution to a special issue on curated by editors Shimon Amir, Karen Gamble, Oliver Stork, and Harry Pantazopoulos.
昼夜节律计时可以通过短暂的闪光来重置,使用的刺激方案比以前认为传统光疗所必需的方案短数千倍。这些观察结果表明,在未来,纳秒、微秒和毫秒级光脉冲的灵活架构可以被编译,以在精神病或老年等因素改变大脑内部时钟时对其进行重新编程。在当前的综述中,我们介绍了一系列开创性的实验,这些实验确立了光对人类昼夜节律系统的同步影响,以及长时间暴露在明亮光线下减轻与季节性情感障碍相关症状的功效。最后,我们讨论了在睡眠期间精确闪光可以通过不同的方式转化,以影响大脑功能的神经适应性变化。本文是对由 Shimon Amir、Karen Gamble、Oliver Stork 和 Harry Pantazopoulos 编辑的特刊的贡献。