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Medicine

Video How Light at Night Affects Preschoolers' Sleep Patterns (Video) 51

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The effects of light and dark on adults' Circadian rythym has been studied over and over, but there hasn't been much research done on how light at night affects young children's sleep patterns. This is the topic of Lameese Akacem's doctoral dissertation, and is a study being carried out under the aegis of the Sleep and Development Laboratory at the University of Colorado, Boulder, under the direction of Assistant Professor Monique K. LeBourgeois. Aside from the inherent value of this research, which may help parents decide whether (and how much) they are messing up their children's sleep patterns by letting them view screens such as TVs, tablets or smart phones near bedtime, its funding is unique; the money for this study is coming, at least in part, from crowdfunding. The crowdfunding itself is an experiment. This study is one of a small, select group of projects the University of Colorado at Boulder has in its pilot crowdfunding program. Its crowdfunding time window closes next week, so if you want to help sponsor this experiment, and help learn how different kinds of light can affect how (and how well) small children sleep, you need to act within the next six days. (This is a two-part video. Part one runs today. Part two will run tomorrow.)

Slashdot: Lameese, you are a graduate student working on your doctoral dissertation. Can you talk about your research?

Lameese: Yes. The real focus of my doctoral dissertation is trying to understand the factors that influence the timing of the circadian clock of young children. So we know that lights from well established research in adults, we know that light exposure is the strongest environmental factor, it can affect our internal circadian timing. So the study in particular is going to assess how light at night affects the timing of – or I’m sorry, affects melatonin levels and alertness and sleep, in preschool children.

Slashdot: So what age children are you going to be studying in this study?

Lameese: We are looking at three- or four-year olds, so around pre-school age.

Slashdot: And what sort of factors are you looking at in determining what the effect is, what outcomes are you trying to measure?

Lameese: So our main outcome measures for the study are melatonin levels, and we measure with that by having subjects chew on cotton balls. We have them chew on the cotton for about two minutes and then we spin that down to extract the saliva and that saliva is later tested for melatonin levels.

Slashdot: Can you talk a little bit more about the methodology of this, that’s a good painless we got, _____ painless way to measure for any kind of level, I keep getting shots.

Lameese: So we know that light actually suppresses melatonin levels, so we have to control for that, and our lab is unique in that we do all the research within the children’s homes, so we basically go into the children’s home and make their house into what we like to called a cave, by putting up black plastic on the windows. We use dimmers and low wattage bulbs to create a dim light environment, we do this usually in the early afternoon, and then we start taking saliva samples of the children every half an hour, and just by having them chew for a couple of minutes and spin that down and then later on that saliva is going to tested for melatonin levels.

Slashdot: Is it difficult to find enough three- to four-year old volunteers?

Lameese: We actually have unique ways of recruiting as well, we are very involved in the community, we go to festivals, and different events for kids and we do coloring, or face painting and we get to know lot of families by doing that and just getting their interest from the get go we actually do get a lot of families that are interested in being involved in our work.

Slashdot: How many will there be in this particular study?

Lameese: Well, we are planning on actually studying 10 preschool children for this study.

Slashdot: Now talk a little bit about the lab you’re doing this, that is to say your department, I realize you said you sort of created portable sleep labs for each subject here, but with the department how is it that this falls into your research area?

Lameese: So the department of integrative physiology is very diverse, people study everything from exercise, to sleep, endocrinology, hormones, stress, physiology etc. So our department is where you can have – everybody has kind of an different area that they focus on. But we do actually have another sleep lab in our department that studies sleep kind of the same thing but in adults. So I guess it is fitting into the larger picture and helping us understand how sleep and circadian physiology are basically just fundamental sleep physiology in early childhood.

Slashdot: It is interesting that this is not part of a department of a medicine.

Lameese: Yes, yes. So I guess we’re unique in that not many physiology departments I guess are located on non-medical campuses but I think that’s definitely changing a lot of other universities have that.

Slashdot: So, your study is about the effect of light on alertness and how easily children fall asleep, what are some sources of light that you’re going to be testing?

Lameese: So, we’re actually going to be using what’s called the light box. We are going to expose the children to the light stimulus for an hour and we will measure melatonin levels during that full exposure just to see how melatonin levels are changing once they are exposed to light.

Slashdot: Is that light box, is that tuned to approximate the light output of a particular thing, is like an iPad or computer screen or television or how do you calculate, what’s the kind of light exposure that you’re trying to measure it for.

Lameese: So the light exposure that we plan on using in the study isn’t exactly identical to what you see from like device iPad or TV, it’s actually a lot more. But since there is no research at all looking at how melatonin or how light exposure suppresses melatonin, and then actually we are kind of starting from a larger stimulus of light, and I think future studies definitely need to do more work using iPads or TVs and using smart phones.

Slashdot: Now, one of the things you’ve been measuring besides how long it take kids to fall asleep after light exposure of different levels is their alertness. How do you quantify that? What are you going to use to determine alertness level?

Lameese: So there are certain behavioral tasks that have been used in the field of sleep research like reaction time, doing an addition task, things like that just to measure how alert people are. I don’t know if you guys know them, the exact tasks we put in our study, but that is going to something along the lines of reaction time.

Slashdot: So, Monique, crowd funding is not what I think of as the traditional way that scientific experiments are funded. So can you explain why it is that a university that collects tuition and probably gets some grants what’s the significance and why did you choose this crowdfunding to actually support this upcoming experiment?

Monique: So, C’s crowd funding platform is relatively new and we’re really excited to be part of the first research studies as in features, in support of this mechanism and it probably is very intriguing it’s important for a number of reasons. I think first and foremost it allows the general public to drive the science that they think is most important and not you know, National Institute of College, Or NSF National Science Foundation, and what’s very important also is that the solution, the crowdfunding solution helps us close the gap for getting novel, very cutting edge science that has yet to receive federal funding. And a project with Lameese is that’s extremely cutting edge and it has never been attempted in this age group it is going to give her not only the funds to complete her dissertation work, but it allows our lab to collect pilot data which are central for us getting larger federal research grants and the C crowd funding site especially is really awesome because the donors of the university instead of just turning into the general fund they can actually – or department – they can actually donate to a specific project that they are very interested in.

Slashdot: That makes a lot of sense.

Monique: Yeah.

Slashdot: One thing about crowdfunding in general is that usually there are some interesting perks that people get for the donating, the people donate to a scientific project

Monique: Yeah.

Slashdot: It should be nice to get all the data or some other kind of backstage view of what’s going on with the experiment, well, people get a webcam into your lab or anything like that?

Monique: I really like that. So anyone who donates to our project is going to be receiving an acknowledgment section of the paper that results from this project, we’ll also send them a copy of the project and they’ll be invited to Lameese’s doctoral dissertation defense, if they are local, and they want to come, but I really like your idea about maybe getting a web tour of the lab, or maybe some kind of interview with the researcher students that would be a lot of fun.

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How Light at Night Affects Preschoolers' Sleep Patterns (Video)

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  • by NotDrWho ( 3543773 ) on Wednesday May 13, 2015 @03:28PM (#49684965)

    "Everything fun is bad for you"

    There, now you don't need that grant.

    • Ah, but think of all the grants you *could* get.

    • My right hand has been paying back dividends without any noticeable psychological damage.

      This comment shouldn't have taken three hours to write, but I've been spending most of my time Googling images entirely unrelated to this.
  • by frovingslosh ( 582462 ) on Wednesday May 13, 2015 @03:55PM (#49685123)
    Some day we may have the technology to be able to post both parts at the same time.
    • without the need of Flash?
    • by Kunedog ( 1033226 ) on Wednesday May 13, 2015 @07:01PM (#49686165)
      What made the editors to go to all the effort to post even one article about this?

      its funding is unique; the money for this study is coming, at least in part, from crowdfunding.

      This isn't unique. In fact, three times I've submitted [slashdot.org] news of a crowdfunded, already completed, ground-breaking scientific discovery published in Nature Chemistry, and /. couldn't be bothered to run it. But somehow, this study gets the "deluxe" Slashdot video treament, plus a pointless second article, plus a call to action to "pitch in."

      So, would /. rather read about a major discovery in the hard sciences or about this unfinished (unstarted?) study asking all of us for money?

      repost [slashdot.org] that sums it up (don't feel like typing it all again):
      -----

      I know how it sounds to complain that your one submission (out of the many /. receives) didn't get accepted, but I've tried submitting this recent scientific discovery [slashdot.org] (published in Nature Chemistry [nature.com]) a few times. IMO it's perfect material for Slashdot: an interesting new hypothesis (about a supposedly "well-understood" reaction) put to the test via regularly evolving experiments and apparatuses. And it was even largely funded through Youtube viewers (who the lead scientist thanks in the paper) and documented with (at least one) well-done video [youtube.com].

      But /. never ran it. I can't help but think that part of the problem is that the scientist is Dr. Phil Mason, aka thunderf00t, who is known for his vids that expose Atheism+ and anti-Gamergate types as fools. Think about the lousy submissions that do often make it on the front page, especially those that push an agenda.

      This is why things like Gamergate (and Slashdot's atrocious coverage of it) matter, even if you yourself don't personally care about videogames; it is a fight against neo-puritans who want to filter ALL types of content (not just games, comics, music, movies, etc) you're allowed to see, and refuse to acknowledge the work of those who don't buy into the "narrative."

      P.S. Clearly I'm biased, so if any of you think that my article submission is unworthy for some other reason, let me know (seriously).

  • Oops (Score:4, Informative)

    by wonkey_monkey ( 2592601 ) on Wednesday May 13, 2015 @04:20PM (#49685273) Homepage

    @page { margin: 0.79in } p { margin-bottom: 0.1in; line-height: 120% }

    Careful. Your CSS is showing.

  • A little bourbon will counteract the light quite nicely! And a little coffee in the morning will counteract the bourbon! Problem solved!
  • by tgv ( 254536 )

    Don't crowdfund research. It's bad for publicly funded research. As soon as the government, the universities and the grant organizations find out that crowdfunding works, they'll cut budgets or make their funding dependent on privately acquired money. That means only public darlings will get funded, or projects with corporate backing, and that the research results can end up in a drawer if there are larger backers that have made such provisions. In short, by funding research, you're killing it. Instead, wri

  • Quit crying and screaming! No, there are no monsters, and no you can't have a nite-light! That's bad for you. I read it online a week ago. Just sit there and snivel in the darkness!

    Scientists ... traumatizing children since the Renaissance.

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