As you folks know I am in process of finishing up another degree in the sciences, this time biochemistry.
Invariable, one reaches a point as a professional science geek that one feels the need to experiment on oneself. It is completely unscientific to do so and in many cases outright dangerous, but in this case unlike most episodes of Mythbusters- you CAN try this at home!
You may or may not know there is a wealth of valid data on the effects of short wave length visible light (read that as blue) on human sleep and the circadian clock. They are still working on the exact why and how, but they know for certain there is a link.
In short ambient blue light makes it hard to sleep. I know it sounds a bit wacky, but even in complete darkness there are enough short wavelength photons bouncing around, say off blue bed sheets or an led in the wall wart for your cell phone to mess with sleep.
Here is one of the main journal articles on the subject. It is some heavy reading, but it is no longer behind a pay wall:
Link Removed
Anyway, a certain popular blog called Boing-Boing coincedently popped an article that is a poorly informed version bordering on myth based on the valid research I linked previously.
I coincidentally have been experimenting on myself over the last month with the blue light bit. Boing-Boing wants you to wear orange lens shooter glasses while you sleep. This is as uncomfortable as it sounds. Yeah, it will work in theory, but I bet it is probably not the wisest choice of sleeping gear for we the weapon experts with a bit of the beast. For this method to really work, one needs to wear the orange shooting glasses for two to three hours BEFORE bed and get all the blue light out of the sleeping room...
In my personal experiment, I just eliminated all sources of blue light from the room, and blocked out the windows...
Sources of blue light you have but don't realize they are actually blue because your eyes and brain are easily tricked:
Daylight (thank the effect of atmospheric gasses on this one)
CFL light bulbs
Flatscreen TVs and Monitors(even when the screen is black or white!)
Any LED that isn't red, yellow or orange (reality is with LEDs all but the ones listed are blue, your brain just doesn't let you know it!)
Any non-red/orange backlit alarm clocks
Obvious Blue light sources you know about but wouldn't think actually count:
Blue power on indicators on electronics and and other devices- yeah even the itty bitty ones, a little short wavelength goes a long way, literally
blue blankets and sheets
Blue, many grey and most white wall paints (another example of your eyes and brain lying to you)
After reviewing my sleep log so far, the trend is now starting to form up. Blue light sources in the room- Sludge has insomnia. Blue light sources removed- Sludge sleeps like a corpse but snores like a rabid moose in heat.
Also, my wife likes the new deep forest green paint in the master bedroom!
I need many more months of data collection, but it appears the trend is true so far.
I was going to wait a while before sharing this with you folks, but in light of the Boing-Boing bullshit article, I figured now was as good a time as any.
Having trouble sleeping? Get rid of the blue!
Invariable, one reaches a point as a professional science geek that one feels the need to experiment on oneself. It is completely unscientific to do so and in many cases outright dangerous, but in this case unlike most episodes of Mythbusters- you CAN try this at home!
You may or may not know there is a wealth of valid data on the effects of short wave length visible light (read that as blue) on human sleep and the circadian clock. They are still working on the exact why and how, but they know for certain there is a link.
In short ambient blue light makes it hard to sleep. I know it sounds a bit wacky, but even in complete darkness there are enough short wavelength photons bouncing around, say off blue bed sheets or an led in the wall wart for your cell phone to mess with sleep.
Here is one of the main journal articles on the subject. It is some heavy reading, but it is no longer behind a pay wall:
Link Removed
Anyway, a certain popular blog called Boing-Boing coincedently popped an article that is a poorly informed version bordering on myth based on the valid research I linked previously.
I coincidentally have been experimenting on myself over the last month with the blue light bit. Boing-Boing wants you to wear orange lens shooter glasses while you sleep. This is as uncomfortable as it sounds. Yeah, it will work in theory, but I bet it is probably not the wisest choice of sleeping gear for we the weapon experts with a bit of the beast. For this method to really work, one needs to wear the orange shooting glasses for two to three hours BEFORE bed and get all the blue light out of the sleeping room...
In my personal experiment, I just eliminated all sources of blue light from the room, and blocked out the windows...
Sources of blue light you have but don't realize they are actually blue because your eyes and brain are easily tricked:
Daylight (thank the effect of atmospheric gasses on this one)
CFL light bulbs
Flatscreen TVs and Monitors(even when the screen is black or white!)
Any LED that isn't red, yellow or orange (reality is with LEDs all but the ones listed are blue, your brain just doesn't let you know it!)
Any non-red/orange backlit alarm clocks
Obvious Blue light sources you know about but wouldn't think actually count:
Blue power on indicators on electronics and and other devices- yeah even the itty bitty ones, a little short wavelength goes a long way, literally
blue blankets and sheets
Blue, many grey and most white wall paints (another example of your eyes and brain lying to you)
After reviewing my sleep log so far, the trend is now starting to form up. Blue light sources in the room- Sludge has insomnia. Blue light sources removed- Sludge sleeps like a corpse but snores like a rabid moose in heat.
Also, my wife likes the new deep forest green paint in the master bedroom!
I need many more months of data collection, but it appears the trend is true so far.
I was going to wait a while before sharing this with you folks, but in light of the Boing-Boing bullshit article, I figured now was as good a time as any.
Having trouble sleeping? Get rid of the blue!