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Recommendations for light-dosimetry field studies based on a meta-analysis of personal light levels of office workers

Daytime light levels are important for human physiology. Office workers spend most of their daytime inside buildings where it is unclear whether they receive healthy light levels. A recent publication presented recommendations for the minimum daytime light level for optimal human health, expressed i...

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Main Authors: SW de Vries, M Gkaintatzi-Masouti, J van Duijnhoven, John Mardaljevic, MPJ Aarts
Format: Default Article
Published: 2024
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/2134/25904296.v1
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author SW de Vries
M Gkaintatzi-Masouti
J van Duijnhoven
John Mardaljevic
MPJ Aarts
author_facet SW de Vries
M Gkaintatzi-Masouti
J van Duijnhoven
John Mardaljevic
MPJ Aarts
author_sort SW de Vries (18615022)
collection Figshare
description Daytime light levels are important for human physiology. Office workers spend most of their daytime inside buildings where it is unclear whether they receive healthy light levels. A recent publication presented recommendations for the minimum daytime light level for optimal human health, expressed in melanopic equivalent daylight illuminance (EDI). The current paper assesses whether this recommended daytime light level is achieved by office workers through a meta-analysis of personal light levels of office workers, obtained from light-dosimetry field studies. From our literature search, we identified nine eligible papers. These papers comprised data from studies in one or multiple office buildings, over one or more seasons, from 1 to 62 participants, and for 19 to 564 workdays. After analysing the data, we found that in none of the offices the recommended minimum light level of 250 melanopic EDI was met for the entire day. Only 1 out of 6 median and 6 out of 13 mean reported personal light levels were above this recommended value. Unfortunately, these conclusions are less groundbreaking than we hoped for, due to large differences between study protocols. This resulted in a large variety of (unreported) study characteristics (i.e. light data, light-dosimeter, participant, building and environment) which complicated a fair comparison between the different studies. To facilitate meta-analyses of light-dosimetry field studies, we introduce recommendations for data collection and reporting in light-dosimetry field studies. We based these recommendations on the gaps identified from our meta-analysis, supplemented by recommendations from other papers.
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institution Loughborough University
publishDate 2024
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spelling rr-article-259042962024-05-14T00:00:00Z Recommendations for light-dosimetry field studies based on a meta-analysis of personal light levels of office workers SW de Vries (18615022) M Gkaintatzi-Masouti (18615025) J van Duijnhoven (18615028) John Mardaljevic (1252824) MPJ Aarts (18615031) Architecture Building Engineering Building & Construction Daytime light levels are important for human physiology. Office workers spend most of their daytime inside buildings where it is unclear whether they receive healthy light levels. A recent publication presented recommendations for the minimum daytime light level for optimal human health, expressed in melanopic equivalent daylight illuminance (EDI). The current paper assesses whether this recommended daytime light level is achieved by office workers through a meta-analysis of personal light levels of office workers, obtained from light-dosimetry field studies. From our literature search, we identified nine eligible papers. These papers comprised data from studies in one or multiple office buildings, over one or more seasons, from 1 to 62 participants, and for 19 to 564 workdays. After analysing the data, we found that in none of the offices the recommended minimum light level of 250 melanopic EDI was met for the entire day. Only 1 out of 6 median and 6 out of 13 mean reported personal light levels were above this recommended value. Unfortunately, these conclusions are less groundbreaking than we hoped for, due to large differences between study protocols. This resulted in a large variety of (unreported) study characteristics (i.e. light data, light-dosimeter, participant, building and environment) which complicated a fair comparison between the different studies. To facilitate meta-analyses of light-dosimetry field studies, we introduce recommendations for data collection and reporting in light-dosimetry field studies. We based these recommendations on the gaps identified from our meta-analysis, supplemented by recommendations from other papers.<p></p> 2024-05-14T00:00:00Z Text Journal contribution 2134/25904296.v1 https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Recommendations_for_light-dosimetry_field_studies_based_on_a_meta-analysis_of_personal_light_levels_of_office_workers/25904296 CC BY-NC 4.0
spellingShingle Architecture
Building
Engineering
Building & Construction
SW de Vries
M Gkaintatzi-Masouti
J van Duijnhoven
John Mardaljevic
MPJ Aarts
Recommendations for light-dosimetry field studies based on a meta-analysis of personal light levels of office workers
title Recommendations for light-dosimetry field studies based on a meta-analysis of personal light levels of office workers
title_full Recommendations for light-dosimetry field studies based on a meta-analysis of personal light levels of office workers
title_fullStr Recommendations for light-dosimetry field studies based on a meta-analysis of personal light levels of office workers
title_full_unstemmed Recommendations for light-dosimetry field studies based on a meta-analysis of personal light levels of office workers
title_short Recommendations for light-dosimetry field studies based on a meta-analysis of personal light levels of office workers
title_sort recommendations for light-dosimetry field studies based on a meta-analysis of personal light levels of office workers
topic Architecture
Building
Engineering
Building & Construction
url https://hdl.handle.net/2134/25904296.v1