The relevance of daylight for humans
Abstract
Daylight is ubiquitous and is crucial for mammalian vision as well as for non-visual input to the brain
via the intrinsically photosensitive retinal ganglion cells (ipRGCs) that express the photopigment
melanopsin. The ipRGCs project to the circadian clock in the suprachiasmatic nuclei and thereby
ensure entrainment to the 24-hour day-night cycle, and changes in daylength trigger the appropriate
seasonal behaviours. The ipRGCs also project to the perihabenular nucleus and surrounding brain
regions that modulate mood, stress and learning in animals and humans. Given that light has strong
direct effects on mood, cognition, alertness, performance, and sleep, light can be considered a
“drug” to treat many clinical conditions. Light therapy is already well established for winter and
other depressions and circadian sleep disorders. Beyond visual and non-visual effects via the retina,
daylight contributes to prevent myopia in the young by its impact on eye development, and is
important for Vitamin D synthesis and bone health via the skin. The sun is the most powerful light
source and, dependent on dose, its ultraviolet radiance is toxic for living organisms and can be used
as a disinfectant. Most research involves laboratory-based electric light, without the dynamic and
spectral changes that daylight undergoes moment by moment. There is a gap between the
importance of daylight for human beings and the amount of research being done on this subject.
Daylight is taken for granted as an environmental factor, to be enjoyed or avoided, according to
conditions. More daylight awareness in architecture and urban design beyond aesthetic values and
visual comfort may lead to higher quality work and living environments. Although we do not yet
have a factual basis for the assumption that natural daylight is overall “better” than electric light, the
environmental debate mandates serious consideration of sunlight not just for solar power but also
as biologically necessary for sustainable and healthy living.
Link to resource
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bcp.2020.114304Collections
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