<p><br></p><p dir="ltr">Light exposure plays a crucial role in shaping cognitive function; however, its effects outside controlled laboratory settings remain insufficiently explored. This study aimed to investigate the impact of real-world light exposure on cognitive performance, revealing both immediate and cumulative benefits. To achieve this, we employed a wearable melanopic equivalent daylight illuminance monitor (Spectrawear) alongside a mobile application (Brightertime) to assess subjective sleepiness, vigilance, working memory, and visual search performance throughout the day in everyday life. The wrist-worn light dosimeter recorded continuous light exposure at 30-second intervals over a one-week period. The mobile app facilitated data collection, including baseline sociodemographic and health questionnaires, chronotype and sleep quality assessments, daily sleep diaries, and subjective sleepiness reports and cognitive task performance measurements. Participants could engage in cognitive assessments multiple times per day at their convenience. At the end of the one-week study period, participants were invited to a laboratory visit for light sensitivity measurements. These included melanopic brightness discrimination tasks, post-illumination pupil response assessments, and subjective brightness evaluations. This repository contains the data and manuscript figure and table files for this study.</p>
Funding
This work was funded by the University of Manchester Wellcome Trust/ISSF fund to RJL, MVT, TMB, AJC, and SJ and by a Wellcome Trust Investigator Award (210684/Z/18/Z) to RJL.