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Living Without Temporal Cues: A Case Study

María‐Ángeles Bonmatí‐Carrión, Victoria L. Revell, Tom J. Cook, Thomas R. E. Welch, María Ángeles Rol, Debra J. Skene, Juan Antonio Madrid

2020Frontiers in Physiology20 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Isolation from external time cues allows endogenous circadian rhythmicity to be demonstrated. In this study, also filmed as a television documentary, we assessed rhythmic changes in a healthy man time isolated in a bunker for 9 days/nights. During this period the lighting conditions were varied between: (1) self-selected light/dark cycle, (2) constant dim light, and (3) light/dark cycle with early wake up. A range of variables was assessed and related to the sleep-wake cycle, psychomotor and physical performance and clock-time estimation. This case study using modern non-invasive monitoring techniques emphasizes how different physiological circadian rhythms persist in temporal isolation under constant dim light conditions with different waveforms, free-running with a period (τ) between 24 and 25 h. In addition, a significant correlation between time estimation and mid-sleep time, a proxy for circadian phase, was demonstrated.

Topics & Concepts

Circadian rhythmRhythmPeriod (music)Circadian clockEndogenyTime perceptionPsychomotor learningProxy (statistics)BiologyAudiologyPsychologyNeuroscienceMedicineInternal medicineEndocrinologyStatisticsMathematicsPhysicsPerceptionCognitionAcousticsCircadian rhythm and melatoninSleep and related disordersImpact of Light on Environment and Health
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