研究目的
To test whether the effect of blue-enriched lighting on vigilance performance depends on participants’ arousal level.
研究成果
The exercise-induced manipulation of arousal produced robust alerting effects on subjective, physiological, and behavioral measures, while blue-enriched lighting only affected subjective sleepiness and positive affect without influencing behavior or physiology. There was no interaction between lighting and arousal, indicating that blue-enriched light is ineffective when arousal is elevated. The study recommends acute physical exercise over blue-enriched lighting for enhancing alertness in work settings requiring sustained attention.
研究不足
The low arousal condition involved pedaling, which may not be equivalent to a true resting state, potentially masking subtle lighting effects. The study did not include a resting control condition, which could have provided better sensitivity for lighting effects. The sample size was small (24 participants), and results may not generalize to other populations or settings. Lighting effects might be more pronounced under conditions of sleep deprivation or mental fatigue, which were not tested here.
1:Experimental Design and Method Selection:
A repeated-measures design with four sessions combining blue-enriched vs. dim light and low vs. high arousal conditions. Arousal was manipulated through cycling exercise at two intensities, and vigilance was assessed using a psychomotor vigilance task (PVT).
2:Sample Selection and Data Sources:
24 participants from the University of Granada, selected based on inclusion criteria including sleep habits, health, and chronotype. Data included subjective measures (PANAS, KSS, RPE), physiological measures (heart rate, skin temperature), and behavioral data from the PVT.
3:List of Experimental Equipment and Materials:
Cycle-ergometer (VIAsprint 150 P, Ergoline GmbH), heart rate monitor (Polar V-800 with H7 sensor), temperature sensors (iButton DS1921H), lighting system (IgniaLight LED matrix, SACOPA), spectrophotometer (KONICA MINOLTA CL-500A), ACM device (KRONOWISE KW3, CRONOLAB), headphones (Seinheiser HD 201), computer with E-Prime 2.0 software.
4:0 software.
Experimental Procedures and Operational Workflow:
4. Experimental Procedures and Operational Workflow: Participants completed sessions at 10 pm on consecutive days. After baseline measurements, they underwent light adaptation and exercise manipulation, followed by the PVT task under specified lighting conditions. Subjective and physiological data were collected before and after tasks.
5:Data Analysis Methods:
Repeated-measures ANOVA for subjective, physiological, and behavioral data. Bayesian ANOVA for PVT data to assess null hypothesis support. Data were analyzed using statistical software (not specified).
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