Effect of Illuminance and Color Temperature on Lowering of Physiological Activity.
- 1 January 1999
- journal article
- Published by Japan Society of Physiological Anthropology in Applied Human Science
- Vol. 18 (4) , 117-123
- https://doi.org/10.2114/jpa.18.117
Abstract
To investigate how illuminance and color temperature in illumination affect the autonomic nervous system and central nervous system in conditions tending to lower physiological activity, and with an ordinary residential setting in mind, we performed an experiment on 8 healthy male subjects. The experimental conditions consisted of 4 conditions provided by a combination of 2 levels of color temperature (3000 K, 5000 K) and 2 levels of illuminance (30 lx, 150 lx). Physiological measurement was carried out during a process of 22 minutes of light exposure followed by 20 minutes of sleep in darkness. Heart rate variability (HRV) was used as an index of the autonomic nervous system, and alpha attenuation coefficient (AAC) and mean frequency of EEG were used as indices of the central nervous system. Subjective evaluation of drowsiness during the experiment was also carried out immediately following the 20 minutes sleep. No effect on HRV from illumination was noted, but significantly (p < 0.05) lower values for AAC were obtained under 3000 K conditions than 5000 K conditions in measurements during the first half of light exposure (Session 1). During alpha attenuation testing, significantly (p < 0.05) lower values for mean frequency in the theta-beta EEG bandwidth were also obtained under 3000 K conditions than 5000 K conditions, but that pattern persisted in measurement during the second half of light exposure (Session 2). Subjective drowsiness was also higher under 3000 K conditions than 5000 K conditions. These results suggest that low color temperature light creates a smooth lowering of central nervous system activity, and that low color temperature illumination can be used effectively in a bedroom or other such environment where it is desirable to facilitate lowered physiological activity.Keywords
This publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit:
- Heart Rate Variability; An Index for Monitoring and Analyzing Human Autonomic Activities.Applied Human Science, 1999
- Physiological and Psychological Effects of Illuminance in an Office SpaceJournal of the Illuminating Engineering Institute of Japan, 1996
- Melatonin, cortisol, EEG, ECG and subjective comfort in healthy humans: Impact of two fluorescent lamp types at two light intensitiesLighting Research & Technology, 1993
- The Effect of Color Temperature of Lighting Sources on the Autonomic Nervous Functions.The Annals of physiological anthropology, 1992
- The Effect of Color Temperature of Lighting Sources on Mental Activity Level.The Annals of physiological anthropology, 1992
- Physiological effects of illuminance.Journal of Light & Visual Environment, 1986
- Description of Heart‐Rate Variability Data in Accordance With a Physiological Model for the Genesis of HeartbeatsPsychophysiology, 1985
- The Multiple Sleep Latency Test: What Does It Measure?Sleep, 1982
- Physiological Effects of Environmental Lighting ConditionsJournal of the Illuminating Engineering Institute of Japan, 1981
- Analysis of Heart Rate VariabilityErgonomics, 1973