Department of Biology, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, USA.
Regulatory Biology Laboratory, Salk Institute, La Jolla, California, USA.
J Pineal Res. 2023 Mar;74(2):e12843. doi: 10.1111/jpi.12843. Epub 2022 Dec 7.
In the absence of electric light, sleep for humans typically starts soon after dusk and at higher latitudes daily sleep timing changes seasonally as photoperiod changes. However, access to electric light shields humans from natural photoperiod changes, and whether seasonal changes in sleep occur despite this isolation from the natural light-dark cycle remains a matter of controversy. We measured sleep timing in over 500 university students living in the city of Seattle, WA (47.6°N) throughout the four seasons; we show that even when students are following a school schedule, sleep timing is delayed during the fall and winter. For instance, during the winter school days, students fell asleep 35 min later and woke up 27 min later (under daylight-savings time) than students during the summer school days, a change that is an hour larger relative to solar midnight. Furthermore, chronotype defined by mid-sleep on free days corrected for oversleep (MSFc), an indirect estimate of circadian phase, was more than 30 min later in the winter compared with the summer. Analysis of the effect of light exposure showed that the number of hours of light exposure to at least 50 lux during the daytime was a stronger predictor of MSFc than the exposure time to this illuminance after dusk. Specifically, MSFc was advanced by 30 min for each additional hour of light exposure during daytime and delayed by only 15 min for each additional hour of postdusk exposure to light. Additionally, the time of the day of exposure to high light intensities was more predictive of MSFc when daytime exposure was considered than when exposure for the full 24-h day was considered. Our results show that although sleep time is highly synchronized to social time, a delayed timing of sleep is evident during the winter months. They also suggest that daily exposure to daylight is key to prevent this delayed phase of the circadian clock and thus circadian disruption that is typically exacerbated in high-latitude winters.
在没有电灯的情况下,人类通常在黄昏后不久就开始入睡,而在高纬度地区,每天的睡眠时间会随着光周期的变化而季节性变化。然而,电灯的使用使人类免受自然光周期变化的影响,尽管如此,睡眠是否会发生季节性变化仍然存在争议。我们在整个四季中测量了居住在华盛顿州西雅图市(北纬 47.6°)的 500 多名大学生的睡眠时间;结果表明,即使学生们按照学校的时间表上课,他们的睡眠时间在秋季和冬季也会推迟。例如,在冬季的上学日,学生们入睡时间比夏季上学日晚 35 分钟,醒来时间比夏季上学日晚 27 分钟(夏令时),相对于太阳能午夜,这一变化大了一个小时。此外,根据自由日的午夜睡眠时间(MSFc)定义的昼夜类型,在冬季比夏季晚了 30 多分钟,这是对昼夜节律相位的间接估计。对光照暴露影响的分析表明,白天至少接受 50 勒克斯光照的时间与 MSFc 更相关,而不是在黄昏后接受此照度的时间。具体来说,白天每增加一个小时的光照,MSFc 就会提前 30 分钟,而黄昏后每增加一个小时的光照,MSFc 只会延迟 15 分钟。此外,当仅考虑白天的高光强暴露时间时,暴露时间比全天 24 小时的暴露时间更能预测 MSFc。我们的研究结果表明,尽管睡眠时间与社会时间高度同步,但在冬季,睡眠时间的推迟是显而易见的。它们还表明,每天接受日光照射是防止这种昼夜节律时钟延迟相位的关键,从而防止通常在高纬度冬季加剧的昼夜节律紊乱。