So That's Why
We all know we shouldn't scroll before bed — but has anyone actually explained why blue light disrupts sleep? In this episode, Jen, Chris, and Matt unpack the biology behind one of modern life's most common habits. Specialised cells in your retina contain a protein called melanopsin that is maximally sensitive to blue light wavelengths — the same wavelengths emitted by our screens. When those cells fire, they signal your brain's master clock that it's daytime, suppressing melatonin and delaying your body's natural wind-down process. Your circadian system, it turns out, cannot distinguish your phone from the morning sun. The team also covers why children are significantly more vulnerable than adults, what the research actually says about blue light blocking glasses (the tint colour matters far more than most people realise), whether night mode on your phone is doing anything useful, and why the widely marketed claim that screens damage your eyes isn't supported by current evidence. Timestamps 00:00 - Introduction 01:37 - How much does blue light actually matter? 03:14 - The biology: what's happening in your brain 06:55 - Why children are more vulnerable than adults 09:45 - Do blue light blocking glasses work? 11:14 - Night mode, brightness and practical tips 13:04 - Does blue light actually damage your eyes? YOUR PHONE IS TRIGGERING A SUNRISE RESPONSE [03:14] The reason blue light disrupts sleep isn't a vague sensitivity — it's a specific, hardwired biological pathway. Your retina contains specialised cells called IPRGCs (intrinsically photosensitive retinal ganglion cells) that contain a light-sensitive protein called melanopsin. Melanopsin is most sensitive to blue wavelengths between 460 and 480 nanometres, which overlaps directly with the light emitted by screens. When these cells detect blue light, they signal the suprachiasmatic nucleus — the brain's master clock — that it's daytime. The SCN responds by suppressing melatonin production in the pineal gland. As Chris explains: "Your circadian systems can't distinguish between natural daylight and artificial light from screens, because both activate the same pathway." THE NUMBERS ARE MORE SIGNIFICANT THAN MOST PEOPLE EXPECT [01:37] Just two hours of evening screen use can suppress melatonin production by over 50% and delay the normal melatonin rise by an hour and a half. Around a third of people experience reduced sleep duration as a result, and half report feeling less tired at bedtime — which sounds convenient until you realise their natural drowsiness signals are being chemically overridden. The effects don't stop when you put the phone down, either. Melatonin suppression and the alerting effects persist for some time after the screen goes off. As Chris puts it, the circadian system doesn't have an instant reset button. CHILDREN ARE SIGNIFICANTLY MORE VULNERABLE — HERE'S THE BIOLOGY [06:55] A study comparing children (average age nine) to adults (average age 40) found that under blue light-enriched conditions, children experienced over 80% reduction in melatonin levels, compared to a much weaker response in adults. Two physical factors explain this. Children have larger pupils, which admit more light. Their eye lenses are also clearer — as we age, the lens naturally yellows, filtering out some blue light before it reaches the photosensitive cells. Children don't yet have that filter. As Matt observes: "The very thing that gives kids those beautiful crystal clear eyes also makes them more vulnerable to the screen." BLUE LIGHT GLASSES AND NIGHT MODE: WHAT THE RESEARCH ACTUALLY SHOWS [09:45] Not all blue light glasses are equal. Clear lenses filter only 10 to 30% of blue light. Amber or orange lenses can block 90% or more — and studies involving people with insomnia found that amber-tinted lenses worn for two hours before bedtime did lead to measurable improvements in sleep quality and duration. Night mode alone isn't the full picture, either. A 2024 study found that overall screen brightness may matter as much as, or more than, colour temperature. Night mode combined with reduced brightness performs better than either setting alone. One important note: current evidence does not support the claim that blue light from screens damages eyes. The American Academy of Ophthalmology has stated there is insufficient evidence for this. The sun delivers up to 1,000 times more blue light than a screen. ABOUT SO THAT'S WHY So That's Why is a weekly podcast where Jen, Chris, and Matt unpack the science behind everyday health questions. No jargon, no judgment — just genuine curiosity and proper research.
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