Summary
A spectacle-mounted wearable light logger designed to measure α-opic (melanopic) light at the corneal plane was tested in 18 undergraduate students over 24 hours, revealing only modest user acceptability due to size, weight, stability, and social conspicuousness. The findings highlight the need for miniaturization and discreet integration of light loggers into everyday objects to enable personalized light exposure monitoring for clinical and research applications.
Key Findings
- Sample: n=18 undergraduate students (mean age 20.1±1.7 years, 9 female), Oxford, UK, 24-hour real-world measurement period.
- Acceptability ratings were modest; key barriers identified via thematic analysis were device form factor (size, weight, stability) and social reactions from others to the visible device.
- Miniaturization and 'invisible' integration into existing everyday objects were identified as the primary directions for future development to improve usability in research, clinical, and consumer contexts.
Categories
The Science of Light: Evaluates a wearable corneal-plane α-opic light logger for measuring biologically relevant light exposure metrics in naturalistic field conditions.
Sleep & Circadian Health: Addresses measurement of personal light exposure ('spectral diet') to understand circadian entrainment and melatonin suppression in real-world settings.
Author(s)
E Balajadia, S Garcia, J Stampfli, B Schrader
Publication Year
2023
Number of Citations
2
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