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How Moods Are Affected By The Sun

Essay, Research Paper


How Moods Are Affected By The Sun


Jared Sousa


1/20/96


Descriptive Research


Thesis: The amount of sun people receive affects their mood.


A young woman lies asleep on a cold, overcast winter morning. At 4 A.M., a


faint incandescence radiates from a light bulb placed near her bed. The light


gradually gains intensity and covers until 6 A.M., when the woman awakes. She


had just experienced a simulated dawn of a new day. After being treated with


this for several days, the woman’s annual winter depression slowly goes away.


Does this mean that the less sun you get the worse you feel, or perhaps the


more you get the better your mood? It is very possible that you may feel this


way as millions of people worldwide have experienced it first-hand. This


phenomena is still sort of a mystery as many researchers don’t completely


understand why this happens. “It may be that certain individuals have inherited


vulnerability that causes them to develop depression in the absence of exposure


to sufficient environmental light”1. Frederick A. Cook, the arctic explorer,


provided a vivid description of the effects of prolonged darkness on the human


psyche: “The curtain of blackness which has overfallen the outer world has also


descended upon the inner world of our souls,” Cook wrote in his journal on May


16, 1898, “Around our tables . . . . men are sitting about sad and dejected


lost in dreams of melancholy. For brief moments some try to break the spell by


jokes, told perhaps for the 50th time. Others grind out a cheerful philosophy;


but all efforts to infuse bright hopes fail.”2 Some believe that light affects


the body’s ability to make serotonin, a neurotransmitter that helps induce


feelings of calm and well being. The eye’s sensitivity may also play a part in


sun/mood relations. A study was done to a group of people in the winter and


summer. In the winter the many individuals experienced much more difficulty


seeing dim light after sitting in the dark for a while.3 Another study done in


Vancouver shows that electrical activity in the retinas when a bright light is


shone, is significantly less in winter4.


As much as 5% of Americans suffer from Seasonal Affective disorder, also known


as SAD5. SAD is an illness in which the sufferers feel depressed, feel


lethargic, and they overeat . There is no known cause for this widespread


illness. Many researchers of SAD are speculating on the idea that SAD patients


might have seasonal variations in their melatonin secretions. A study of


melatonin patterns in SAD sufferers was done to determine if melatonin was a


factor in the disorder. Since mostly women are affected by SAD, researchers


used healthy women as the control. The researchers who found that the


significant difference in winter and summer pacemaking that occurred in SAD


patients also saw similar patterns in the healthy women. Other studies show


that a SAD sufferer’s eye usually does not take in as much sunlight in the


winter as a normal person, which may exaggerate the depression and other


symptoms.6 Most SAD patients treated with light therapy for a few weeks usually


lose the depression. SAD patients that tended to eat more than one portion of


sweet things (such as chocolate, cake, or ice cream) per day usually found


temporary relief from their illness.7 Swiss scientists believe that the sweet


foods seems to “trigger” the release of the same mood-altering substances that


light triggers.


Nevertheless, light — or lack thereof — can really get under our skin. For


instance, “Rapid changes in the day length greatly modify the daily cycle of


sleep and melatonin secretion,” report researchers led by psychiatrist Thomas A.


Wehr of the National Institute of Mental Health, “. . . brain mechanisms that


detect and respond to seasonal changes in day length may have been conserved in


the course of human evolution.”8 The findings with the sun’s affect on humans


matched those already observed in rats. Many of us have not yet realized what


an important factor light is in our daily life. “Light is a complex stimulus


that has been inadequately specified, given the intense clinical experimentation


of the last five years.”9 Research with these results easily prove that the


sun and light really do alter our mood, and have a great influence on our lives.

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