Blue-Enriched White Light Enhances Physiological Arousal But Not Behavioral Performance during Simulated Driving at Early Night
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemEditorial
Frontiers Media
Materia
lighting alertness psychomotor vigilance task
Fecha
2017-06-22Referencia bibliográfica
Rodríguez Morilla, B. et. al. Front. Psychol. 8:997. [https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2017.00997]
Patrocinador
Spanish and Andalusian Governments to AC. (MINECO: PSI2014-58041-P; Proyectos de Excelencia JJAA: SEJ-3054) and to JM (MINECO: SAF2013- 49132-C2-1-R)Resumen
Vigilance usually deteriorates over prolonged driving at non-optimal times of day.
Exposure to blue-enriched light has shown to enhance arousal, leading to behavioral
benefits in some cognitive tasks. However, the cognitive effects of long-wavelength
light have been less studied and its effects on driving performance remained to
be addressed. We tested the effects of a blue-enriched white light (BWL) and a
long-wavelength orange light (OL) vs. a control condition of dim light on subjective,
physiological and behavioral measures at 21:45 h. Neurobehavioral tests included the
Karolinska Sleepiness Scale and subjective mood scale, recording of distal-proximal
temperature gradient (DPG, as index of physiological arousal), accuracy in simulated
driving and reaction time in the auditory psychomotor vigilance task. The results
showed that BWL decreased the DPG (reflecting enhanced arousal), while it did not
improve reaction time or driving performance. Instead, blue light produced larger driving
errors than OL, while performance in OL was stable along time on task. These data
suggest that physiological arousal induced by light does not necessarily imply cognitive
improvement. Indeed, excessive arousal might deteriorate accuracy in complex tasks
requiring precision, such as driving.