Golden_Pigeon
Banned
Hello dear GAF,
Since my favorite hobby and my work involve computer screen, i'm starting to realize that i spend most of the day in front of a monitor. I made some research about the eventuals health issue that could come from this situation and it's not pretty:
As Stevens says in the new article, researchers now know that increased nighttime light exposure tracks with increased rates of breast cancer, obesity and depression.
Source
For decades, studies have indicated that spending significant time parked in front of a screen — whether it's a TV, computer or tablet — lowers cardiovascular health outcomes and increases mortality risk. And the unfortunate thing about this is that exercising more doesn't seem to do much about it. If you're trying to offset your days of playing Skyrim on the couch with healthy amounts of exercise each day, it may not be enough; a 2011 study of 4500 adults showed that lots of screen time raised your likelihood of death by up to 52 percent, while being a good exerciser only lowered that by about 4 percent. So it's not just the sedentary lifestyle; it's something about screen viewing itself that causes our bodies to work less well. If you want to live longer, get fitter, have a healthier heart and be able to talk to your friends properly, it seems that logging off social media immediately and going for a long, long walk might be your best option.
Source
So, what do you do about ? Do you have special rule ? I use a software called F.lux to limit the blue light emanating from the screen, is it enough ? help
Explanation of the effect of blue light in our brain and why it could be problematic (thanks Greddleok!):
You're thinking about it wrong.
Blue light does affect your circadian rhythm. This is completely sound science based on numerous findings.
Alterations in circadian rhythms such as genetic manipulations, inverted light periods, "jet lag" (increased length of one period compared to another for a short amount of time) and chemical manipulations all affect physiology. Again, there are mountains of evidence that this is true.
Physiology can be affected multiple, subtle ways. Example:
Dampened circadian rhythms cause insulin resistance and diabetes, non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, hepatocarcinoma, depression and weight gain. All of these are not just correlations, but also have mechanistic corroborations. However, many of the studies are done in mice. That is not to say that they're not relevant to humans, the contrary, most have been backed up in human studies, despite it being very difficult to keep people on a fixed circadian schedule, showing the robustness of these findings. However, mice don't think about their health. They live to eat, and if they're lucky, fuck.
In terms of the effects, all these changes on the hormonal, cellular and molecular level do indeed occur, they make you eat worse by increasing your appetite, increasing your desire for sugary and fatty foods, they cause increased accumulation of fat, decreased insulin resistance and increased glucose in the blood (etc, etc I don't want to name all the effects), however some of these effects can be counteracted by diet and exercise.
There's again, a mountain of evidence to show that AMPK activation, the "energy sensing protein", which becomes activated by exercise or calorie restriction can counteract many of these effects. While not necessarily tested in all the permutations of circadian disruption, AMPK is the master protein of regulating energy metabolism, so a logical extrapolation that it protects from other forms of circadian disruption.