Summary
This paper reviews the effects of daylight and view through residential windows on well-being, discussing the impact on visual performance, spatial appearance, discomfort, stress and restoration, circadian regulation, mood and alertness, and skin-mediated processes.
Categories
Well-being: The paper discusses how daylight and view through residential windows can affect well-being, including mood and alertness.
Cognitive function and memory: The paper discusses how daylight and view through residential windows can affect cognitive function, particularly in terms of visual performance and spatial appearance.
Sleep and insomnia: The paper discusses how daylight and view through residential windows can affect sleep through circadian regulation.
Depression: The paper discusses how daylight and view through residential windows can affect mood, which is relevant to depression.
Lighting Design Considerations: The paper discusses how the design of windows in residential buildings can affect the amount of daylight and view, which in turn can affect well-being.
Mood regulation: The paper discusses how daylight and view through residential windows can affect mood regulation.
Author(s)
JA Veitch, J Christoffersen
Publication Year
2013
Number of Citations
26
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Well-being
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Cognitive function and memory
- Phototransduction by retinal ganglion cells that set the circadian clock
- The two‐process model of sleep regulation: a reappraisal
- Strange vision: ganglion cells as circadian photoreceptors
- Information processing in the primate retina: circuitry and coding
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Sleep and insomnia
- The two‐process model of sleep regulation: a reappraisal
- Strange vision: ganglion cells as circadian photoreceptors
- Melanopsin-positive intrinsically photosensitive retinal ganglion cells: from form to function
- Functional and morphological differences among intrinsically photosensitive retinal ganglion cells
- The impact of light from computer monitors on melatonin levels in college students
Depression
- The two‐process model of sleep regulation: a reappraisal
- Light therapy and Alzheimer's disease and related dementia: past, present, and future
- Melanopsin-expressing intrinsically photosensitive retinal ganglion cells in retinal disease
- Nocturnal light exposure impairs affective responses in a wavelength-dependent manner
- Photoreception for circadian, neuroendocrine, and neurobehavioral regulation
Lighting Design Considerations
- Color appearance models
- Melanopsin-positive intrinsically photosensitive retinal ganglion cells: from form to function
- Acute alerting effects of light: A systematic literature review
- Form and function of the M4 cell, an intrinsically photosensitive retinal ganglion cell type contributing to geniculocortical vision
- Melanopsin and rod–cone photoreceptors play different roles in mediating pupillary light responses during exposure to continuous light in humans
Mood regulation
- Effects of artificial dawn and morning blue light on daytime cognitive performance, well-being, cortisol and melatonin levels
- Nocturnal light exposure impairs affective responses in a wavelength-dependent manner
- The role of the circadian clock in animal models of mood disorders.
- Signalling by melanopsin (OPN4) expressing photosensitive retinal ganglion cells
- Early electronic screen exposure and autistic-like symptoms