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NUITFRANCE - Bibliothèque - Fiche bibliographique
Bibliothèque
Cette rubrique recense :
- de la documentation sur les différents thèmes de la nuit (vie nocturne, pollution lumineuse, pollution sonore, ...).
- les données informatiques relatives à l'éclairage public digitalisées et mises à dispositions en open data par certaines communes,
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Permalien : http://www.nuitfrance.fr/?page=donneesdoc&partie=fiche-bibliographique
Quelques tags associés : [ DOCUMENTATION, PUBLICATIONS, LITTÉRATURE, CONNAISSANCES, LITTÉRATURE GRISE, ARTICLES DE PRESSE, ARTICLES SCIENTIFIQUES, TEXTES JURIDIQUES, PLANS ET PROGRAMMES, JURISPRUDENCE, DÉCRETS, THÈSES ]
► Fiche bibliographique
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Document " Influence of the modern light environment on mood "
Type de document : |
Articles de revue scientifique |
Thème du document : |
Nuit menacée - Lumière artificielle - Impacts sur l'Homme (santé, sommeil, vieillissement) |
Groupe biologique : |
Etres humains |
Auteur(s) : |
BEDROSIAN T.A. NELSON R.J.
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Date de publication : |
Juillet 2013 |
Langue : |
English/Anglais |
Nom du périodique : |
Molecular Psychiatry |
Précisions : |
Volume 18. Numéro 7. Pages 751-757 |
Lien contenu/source : |
https://www.nature.com/articles/mp201370 |
DOI : |
10.1038/mp.2013.70 |
Citation courte : |
Bedrosian & Nelson (2013) |
Citation complète (format NuitFrance) : |
BEDROSIAN T.A. & NELSON R.J. (2013). Influence of the modern light environment on mood. Molecular Psychiatry. Volume 18. Numéro 7. Pages 751-757. |
Résumé du document : |
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Humans and other organisms have adapted to a consistent and predictable 24-h solar cycle, but over the past similar to 130 years the widespread adoption of electric light has transformed our environment. Instead of aligning behavioral and physiological processes to the natural solar cycle, individuals respond to artificial light cycles created by social and work schedules. Urban light pollution, night shift work, transmeridian travel, televisions and computers have dramatically altered the timing of light used to entrain biological rhythms. In humans and other mammals, light is detected by the retina and intrinsically photosensitive retinal ganglion cells project this information both to the circadian system and limbic brain regions. Therefore, it is possible that exposure to light at night, which has become pervasive, may disrupt both circadian timing and mood. Notably, the rate of major depression has increased in recent decades, in parallel with increasing exposure to light at night. Strong evidence already links circadian disruption to major depression and other mood disorders. Emerging evidence from the past few years suggests that exposure to light at night also negatively influences mood. In this review, we discuss evidence from recent human and rodent studies supporting the novel hypothesis that nighttime exposure to light disrupts circadian organization and contributes to depressed mood.
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Saisie sur NuitFrance par : |
Rosor |
Saisie sur NuitFrance en : |
Décembre 2017 |
Identifiant NuitFrance : |
NF-BIBLI-1812 |
Permalien de la fiche NuitFrance : |
http://www.nuitfrance.fr/?page=donneesdoc&partie=fiche-bibliographique&id_doc=1812 |
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