External light schedules can induce nighttime sleep disruptions in a Homeostat-Circadian-Light Model for sleep in young children
Tianyong Yao, Victoria Booth

TL;DR
This study uses a mathematical model to show how external light schedules and routines can disrupt sleep in young children, emphasizing the importance of consistent daily routines for healthy sleep patterns.
Contribution
The paper introduces a Homeostatic-Circadian-Light model to analyze how external light schedules influence nighttime waking in young children, highlighting the impact of light exposure and routines.
Findings
Low daytime light can cause sleep disruptions.
Bright-light exposure promotes nighttime waking.
Irregular routines worsen sleep consolidation.
Abstract
Sleep disturbances, particularly nighttime waking, are highly prevalent in young children and can significantly disrupt not only the child's well-being but also family functioning. Behavioral and environmental strategies, including the regulation of light exposure, are typically recommended treatments for nighttime waking. Using the Homeostatic-Circadian-Light (HCL) mathematical model for sleep timing based on the interaction of the circadian rhythm, the homeostatic sleep drive and external light, we analyze how external light schedules can influence the occurrence of nighttime waking in young children. We fit the model to data for sleep homeostasis and sleep behavior in 2 - 3.5 year olds and identified subsets of parameter ranges that fit the data but indicated a susceptibility to nighttime waking. This suggests that as children develop they may exhibit more or less propensity to…
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