A long time ago I met a scientist from Lichtenstein (of all the places) - he was in charge of the chemistry science involved with lighting in various environments like medical, residential, and various retail. He explained how there's been extensive studies on how lighting affects people under various circumstances - it's not anything shocking but there's a ton of money that's been pumped into this stuff to know how to manipulate environments to try and boost productivity in an office or try to help sales in a retail setting.
The lighting hues and temperatures all influence your brain to react in a certain way where daylight tones will make your brain release the hormones and chemicals usually needed during the day time to be appropriately alert during that time. It's only used in more medical and retail settings so that everything looks like it would in that setting and would be a closer representation to what something would look (medical settings would want brighter, more white light, retail more blue), but it's also used in retail to help boost that feeling you'd get on a sunny day.
The bottom line to all this really is that you shouldn't really constantly be in a setting that needs artificial light to begin with and just be outside when you can. When it's night time, you should be using lighting that is more in tune with fire light since that is what our ancestors used before electricity and is what would be naturally created anyway. You should only be having daylight (more blue) style lights in the bathroom where you can gussy yourself up to know what you'd look like outside during the day, which then leads to certain situations where you might want to have this adjusted based on the lighting you'd be in for whatever event you're preparing yourself for (this would only be for celebrities really...)
This article neglects to mention how there are options to the led style lights suggesting how all led lights are just in the blue spectrum. They are not, you do have options - just not an incandescent one, unless you want to use candles.
Anyway, I don't think it's a huge shock to find out that constant exposure to blue light would make you meek - it probably exhausts the mind and then also if you're constantly under situation that needs lighting and it's always this blue light, it's just no good.
A long time ago I met a scientist from Lichtenstein (of all the places) - he was in charge of the chemistry science involved with lighting in various environments like medical, residential, and various retail. He explained how there's been extensive studies on how lighting affects people under various circumstances - it's not anything shocking but there's a ton of money that's been pumped into this stuff to know how to manipulate environments to try and boost productivity in an office or try to help sales in a retail setting.
The lighting hues and temperatures all influence your brain to react in a certain way where daylight tones will make your brain release the hormones and chemicals usually needed during the day time to be appropriately alert during that time. It's only used in more medical and retail settings so that everything looks like it would in that setting and would be a closer representation to what something would look (medical settings would want brighter, more white light, retail more blue), but it's also used in retail to help boost that feeling you'd get on a sunny day.
The bottom line to all this really is that you shouldn't really constantly be in a setting that needs artificial light to begin with and just be outside when you can. When it's night time, you should be using lighting that is more in tune with fire light since that is what our ancestors used before electricity and is what would be naturally created anyway. You should only be having daylight (more blue) style lights in the bathroom where you can gussy yourself up to know what you'd look like outside during the day, which then leads to certain situations where you might want to have this adjusted based on the lighting you'd be in for whatever event you're preparing yourself for (this would only be for celebrities really...)
This article neglects to mention how there are options to the led style lights suggesting how all led lights are just in the blue spectrum. They are not, you do have options - just not an incandescent one, unless you want to use candles.
Anyway, I don't think it's a huge shock to find out that constant exposure to blue light would make you meek - it probably exhausts the mind and then also if you're constantly under situation that needs lighting and it's always this blue light, it's just no good.