Light Effects on Behavioural Performance Depend on the Individual State of Vigilance
Metadata
Show full item recordEditorial
Plos One
Date
2016-11-07Referencia bibliográfica
Correa Á, Barba A, Padilla F (2016) Light Effects on Behavioural Performance Depend on the Individual State of Vigilance. PLoS ONE 11(11): e0164945. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0164945
Sponsorship
Junta de Andalucía (SEJ-3054)Abstract
Research has shown that exposure to bright white light or blue-enriched light enhances
alertness, but this effect is not consistently observed in tasks demanding high-level cognition
(e.g., Sustained Attention to Response Task-SART, which measures inhibitory control).
Individual differences in sensitivity to light effects might be mediated by variations in
the basal level of arousal. We tested this hypothesis by measuring the participants' behavioural
state of vigilance before light exposure, through the Psychomotor Vigilance Task.
Then we compared the effects of a blue-enriched vs. dim light at nighttime on the performance
of the auditory SART, by controlling for individual differences in basal arousal. The
results replicated the alerting effects of blue-enriched light, as indexed by lower values of
both proximal temperature and distal-proximal gradient. The main finding was that lighting
effects on SART performance were highly variable across individuals and depended on
their prior state of vigilance. Specifically, participants with higher levels of basal vigilance
before light exposure benefited most from blue-enriched lighting, responding faster in the
SART. These results highlight the importance of considering basal vigilance to define the
boundary conditions of light effects on cognitive performance. Our study adds to current
research delineating the complex and reciprocal interactions between lighting effects,
arousal, cognitive task demands and behavioural performance.