Smart phones, tablets and e-readers should have an automatic "bedtime mode" that stops them disrupting people's sleep, says a leading doctor. Prof Paul Gringras argued the setting should filter out the blue light that delays the body clock and keeps people awake later into the evening.
The doctor, from Evelina Children's Hospital in London, said every new model was
It concluded there was a clear trend for new devices to be bigger, brighter, have higher levels of contrast and emit more blue light. The professor of children's sleep medicine told the BBC News website: "That is great for use in the day, but awful for use at night.
He said some sleep-aware apps had already been designed to reduce blue-green light emissions. And that a bedtime mode could automatically filter out the blue as software such as f.lux already does. He said there needed to be
BBC NEWS
Comments
Post a Comment
Post your comment