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Sunday, September 30, 2018

Know Thou Biological Clock monthly Newsletter - Maiden issue

KNOW THOU BIOLOGICAL CLOCK NEWSLETTER - Volume 1, Issue 1
(Saur Ashwin 1940 / Sept-Oct 2018)
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Welcome to the Know Thou Biological Clock Newsletter

In this issue:

1.  Purpose
2.  About Institute of Chronobiology Education & Research
3.  Cutting edge Chronobiology Research
4.  Chronobiology in Ayurved – a perspective
5.  Site of the Month
6.  Chronobiology for Students
7.  Chronobiology for Professionals
8.  Tune your Clock – Games
/ Meditation Techniques
9.  Support ‘Know thou Biological Clock’ Newsletter
10. How to Stop Your Subscription

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From this month I will be writing a monthly newsletter both for academic and non-academic audience. The only purpose is to reach to the larger audience on regular basis with latest news in the field. I will publish only table of content on the blog.
Those interested can request the complete newsletter by sending email id to duraphe@gmail.com.

There is an opportunity of participating in the autorhythmometric (self circadian rhythm) analysis. By volunteering for the study, not only you will help generating scientific clinical data but also become aware about your own biological clock!
 

Following links will give you detailed information about the nature of the study and you can register in any or all of them. If you pass the eligibility criteria, then we will contact you with further instructions. 

Online Chronotype assessment


Online Sleep quality assessment



For volunteering in Autorhythmometry data collection and analysis please register at

https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSfImnKLA8TM_9j_VuaeNrVHto5phPFWPDh70Rurb6RZGtfeLQ/viewform?c=0&w=1 

Thursday, August 30, 2018

Chronotype Assessment

Online Chronotype assessment
Following questionnaire will assess your sleep-wake pattern and daily behavior so as to provide you the feedback about your chronotype or behavioral phenotype in scientific format.
The analysis will be useful for knowing and adjusting your disturbed biological clock. 
A disrupted biological clock is the root cause of all life style diseases whereas a normal biological clock is the key for sound health in the technology driven society.
Your response will be used for research purpose only and analysis report will be sent to you within one week on the email address provided by you.
Link for Chronotype questionnaire
https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSeiDNAKngayCtQ3M8Ab8wiCq-k84i6O0icb9LU-Ykn10brnJA/viewform?c=0&w=1

Tuesday, July 31, 2018

The dark side of light: how artificial lighting is harming the natural world

In the 1950s, Dutch physiologist Frans Verheijen began to study how lights attract animals and interfere with their behaviour. And during the 1970s, more biological observations of the impacts of light started popping up in the literature. But it took two lateral-thinking biogeographers — Catherine Rich, president of the Urban Wildlands Group in Los Angeles, California, and Travis Longcore, now at the University of Southern California in Los Angeles — to see the links between them and organize a conference in 2002, followed by a book,Ecological Consequences of Artificial Night Lighting (Island, 2006), pointing out how far the tendrils of the illuminated night extend.
For the vast majority of organisms — whether human, cockroach or wisp of plankton — the cycle of light and dark is an influential regulator of behaviour. It mediates courtship, reproduction, migration and more. “Since life evolved, Earth has changed dramatically, but there have always been light days and dark nights,” says Christopher Kyba, a physicist at the German Research Centre for Geosciences in Potsdam. “When you change it, you have the worry that it could screw up a lot of things”.
The pace of that change is increasing. Striking images from space over the past two decades reveal the extent to which the night is disappearing. Estimates suggest that more than one-tenth of the planet’s land area experiences artificial light at night1 — and that rises to 23% if skyglow is included2. The extent of artificially lit outdoor areas spread3by 2% every year from 2012 to 2016. An unexpected driver of the trend is the widespread installation of light emitting diodes (LEDs), which are growing in popularity because they are more energy efficient than other bulbs. They tend to emit a broad-spectrum white light that includes most of the frequencies important to the natural world.
The trend has had profound impacts on some species; lights are well known to disorient migrating birds and sea turtles, for example. Scientists have also found that disappearing darkness disturbs the behaviour of crickets, moths and bats, and even increases disease transmission in birds.
The most lethal effects are perhaps on insects — vital food sources and pollinators in many ecosystems. An estimate of the effects of street lamps in Germany suggested that the light could wipe out more than 60 billion insects over a single summer4. Some insects fly straight into lamps and sizzle; some collapse after circling them for hours.
Fewer studies have examined plants, but those that have suggest that light is disrupting them, too. In a study in the United Kingdom5, scientists took a 13-year record of the timing of bud opening in trees, and matched it up with satellite imagery of night-time lighting. After controlling for urban heat, they found that artificial lighting was linked with trees bursting their buds more than a week earlier — a magnitude similar to that predicted for 2 °C of global warming. A study of soya-bean farms in Illinois6 found that the light from adjacent roads and passing cars could be delaying the maturation of crops by up to seven weeks, as well as reducing yield.
Ecosystem effects
Now, the results of some ambitious experiments are coming in. One of the largest is a field experiment in the Netherlands, where eight locations in nature reserves and dark places host several rows of street lamps. The rows are different colours — green, red, white and a control row turned off — and run from a grassland or heath field into a forest7. For six years now, scientists and volunteers have used camera traps to monitor the activity of small mammals; automatic bat detectors to record echolocation calls; mist nets for trapping birds; and nest boxes to assess the timing and success of breeding. Botanists are studying the vegetation underneath the lamps.
Artificial light can also have impacts on ecosystem services — the benefits that ecosystems provide to humans. A study published in Naturelast year found that illuminating a set of Swiss meadows stopped nocturnal insects pollinating plants13. A team led by Eva Knop of the Institute of Ecology and Evolution at the University of Berne, found that insect visits to the plants dropped by nearly two-thirds under artificial light and that daytime pollination couldn’t compensate: the plants produced 13% less fruit. Knop’s team forecast that these changes had the potential to cascade to the daytime pollinator community by reducing the amount of food available. “This is a very important study, which clearly demonstrates that artificial light at night is a threat to pollination,” says Hölker
Light skies
Much of Earth remains free of direct artificial light, but skyglow — light that is scattered back to Earth by aerosols and clouds — is more widespread. It can be so faint that humans can’t see it, but researchers say it could still threaten the 30% of vertebrates and 60% of invertebrates that are nocturnal and exquisitely sensitive to light.
Skyglow “almost certainly” has an impact on biodiversity, Gaston says, because the level is well above the thresholds for triggering many biological responses. And yet, he says, “it’s actually quite hard to do the definitive study”
Bright future
It’s slow, meticulous work, but the field is coalescing as evidence accumulates, says Gaston. “The last two or three years has seen a dramatic improvement in the level of our understanding,” he says.
Nonetheless, there are improvements to make. Even measuring exposure is hard. In the field, the light an organism receives can be difficult to measure; a bird could retreat to the shadow of a nearby tree to avoid illumination, for example. So some scientists have tried strapping light meters to birds to get a better idea of dosage.
As the results seep out, one thing that both frustrates and inspires ecologists is that the remedy is at hand.
Longcore is now gathering published data on how different species, such as shearwaters and sea turtles, respond to different parts of the spectrum, and matching the results to the spectra emitted by different types of lighting. He wants to inform decisions about lighting — for example, which type of lamp to use on a bridge and which at a seaside resort.
Engineers and ecologists know that well-considered lighting can perform its task without “spraying light into the sky”, as Kyba puts it. LEDs can be tweaked to shine in certain parts of the spectrum, to dim and to switch off remotely. “My vision,” says Kyba, “is that in 30 years’ time, the streets will be nicely lit — better than today — but we’ll use one-tenth of the light.”
That would be great news for ecological systems, says Hölker, because darkness is one of the most profound forces to shape nature. “Half of the globe is always dark,” he says. “The night is half the story.”
Nature 553, 268-270 (2018)
doi: 10.1038/d41586-018-00665-7

Saturday, June 30, 2018

All of us may be shift workers; which shift worker are you?

For the thousands of years that humans have existed on this planet, our circadian rhythms have been perfectly synchronized with the day:night cycle. We stayed awake during the day, working in the fields, exploring new territories, and hunting. At night we rested, with only a few individuals staying awake to protect the community from attacks by large animals and other dangers. As communities developed further, soldiers began to mount surprise attacks at night to gain an advantage over opponents. Explorers learned to navigate at night by following the position of the stars and moon. As the industrial era began, it became economically cost-effective to keep the engines of the economy running around the clock. This created a new group of workers – shift workers – who came to work in shifts to continuously man the production machinery, thereby producing goods more quickly and improving the economy of the region.
Going to work in shifts or working a few late-night hours every day was the key to building a better economy and society at large. Slowly it also became apparent that for an individual to be wealthier than others, it was important to work a few extra hours each night. However, this lifestyle of staying awake for longer periods of time – which began a few hundred years ago, particularly among shift workers – is known to disrupt circadian rhythms in physiology, metabolism, and brain function, and to increase the chance of developing many chronic diseases, even cancer. This growing connection between shift work and chronic diseases is ignored by most of us, as we typically don’t think of ourselves as shift workers (e.g., a factory worker, active duty military personnel, or first responder). But, there is a hidden epidemic of shift work-like lifestyles that have been overlooking for years.
Let’s define shift work, as well as the forms of shift work that can disrupt our circadian rhythms in ways that increase our risk of developing a chronic disease. The term shift work is defined differently in different countries and by different agencies. Some say that any work done outside 9 am to 5 pm (i.e., regular working hours) is shift work. According to the International Labor Organization, shift work is defined as staying awake 3 or more hours between 10 pm and 5 am for at least 50 days in a year. Why only 50 days in a year? Because once we disrupt our sleep for 3 or more hours and work under artificial light, circadian rhythms of different hormones, brain chemicals, and metabolites are disrupted, and even if we go back to doing regular shift work, our internal clocks will stay de-synchronized for up to a week. So, staying up late one or two days each week can offset circadian rhythms enough that our circadian clocks are playing catch up all the time.
This means that there are many ways we can disrupt our circadian rhythms; we don’t have to be working the night shift. Many of us don’t realize that if we stay up late a couple days a week, then we are living the life of a shift worker and that this lifestyle will cause long-lasting harm to our brain and body. There are at least 5 lifestyles that terribly disrupt circadian rhythms.
Shiftwork – Nearly 20% of the workforce in industrial countries are card-carrying shift workers. They include people working in the military, airline industry, transportation, food services, police, first responders, etc. They continuously work in these roles for years. In some professions (e.g., military, police, and firefighters) there is enough physical activity to counteract some of the adverse effects of shift work. Nevertheless, they cannot overcome the psychological stress of not sleeping enough or working in shifts. In the airline industry, safety and security concerns have led to better implementation of rest time between shifts, allowing employees to recover from circadian disruption, but some individuals may need more recovery time than others. The good news is that growing awareness about the adverse health impacts of shiftwork is leading to improvements in work schedule, downtime, extra compensation, etc. in many sectors of shiftwork.
Second-hand shift workers are the spouses or loved ones of shift workers who may also stay awake late into the night, or whose sleep and eating schedules are disrupted because they want to interact with their shift-working loved one. We became aware of the prevalence of this group while studying human eating and sleeping behavior for several weeks. In this study, we implemented strict criteria for excluding traditional shift workers. But when we analyzed the sleep:activity records of some participants, we found that their sleep:wake patterns were indistinguishable from a night shift worker. At first, we thought that these people forgot to identify themselves as shift workers. But after follow-up discussions, we realized that they were instead spouses of shift workers who had modified their daily lifestyle to be in sync with their partner.
Chronic jetlag – After traveling three time zones or more (east coast to west coast in the US), it can take up to a week for your circadian rhythms to be back to normal. As such, individuals that fly frequently and accumulate 100,000+ miles in a year (United 1K, Global Services, Oneworld emerald or Oneworld sapphire, Gold or Platinum medallions in Delta, MVP Gold 75K in Alaska air) are literally card-carrying chronic jet laggers and experience chronic circadian disruption. I have experienced this first hand. For ~8–9 months each year I fly at least twice a month, and that is enough to disrupt my rhythms. Being mindful of my patterns of sleep, physical activity, and food intake, I actively try to minimize the effects of frequent travel on my circadian rhythms, and therefore rarely fall sick. I also deliberately stop traveling 3 months each year so my body has enough time to rest and work efficiently.
Digital jetlag is when your body is in one-time zone but your mind is in another zone. How is that possible? This has been feasible only recently due to the widespread use of digital devices and connectivity that make it possible to work in real time with people living in a different time zone or to live-stream video content being generated across the globe. There is a completely new group of workers who did not exist a few decades ago. Those who live in one time zone but their working hours are tied to another time zone. This includes stockbrokers, financial analysts, call center workers, and a large number of IT professionals. Even if they are not classified as shift workers, the pressure to coordinate work with one or more colleagues working in a different time-zone disrupts their circadian rhythms. Similarly, entertainment and social network also disrupt our normal rhythms. We can now play video games or watch live games/concerts with individuals that are three or more time zones away.
Social Jetlag. Finally, the most unrecognized and most prevalent type of circadian disruption is social jetlag, which could affect > 50% of us. This type of jetlag happens when we stay awake past mid-night or have to wake up very early (e.g., 2 or 3 am) to finish an assignment, go clubbing, prepare for exams, etc., for one or more days in a week and then try to re-establish a normal routine on rest of the week. Nearly 70% of high school students, college students, young adults, and new mothers/dads stay up past midnight at least 1 day a week for an entire year, and therefore meet the definition of shift work or jet-lag. It’s as if they are in one time-zone on normal days, and a different time zone on the day they stay awake late into the night. This is no different from the schedule of someone doing night-shift work or traveling to a different time-zone. So, chronic diseases that are more prevalent among traditional shift workers may also affect us when we experience social jetlag.
As you can see, almost all of us fall into at least one of these categories (for at least some phases of our life), and these periods of circadian rhythm disruption adversely affect our health. These circadian-disruptive lifestyles increase our risk for disease in another way. To cope, we often develop bad habits (e.g., dependencies on coffee, tea, alcohol, energy drinks, or drugs to stay alert or to fall asleep). These may appear to be quick fixes, but they slowly become part of our daily routine. Some of these bad habits stay with us for the rest of our lives and contribute in their own ways to disease susceptibility.

http://blog.mycircadianclock.org/all-of-us-may-be-shift-workers-which-shift-worker-are-you/

Saturday, April 28, 2018

Training courses in Chronobiology

Chronobiology though sound only related to life sciences, it is truly an interdisciplinary branch of science dealing with every aspect of not only humans but ecosystem as a whole. Rhythmic geophysical cycles has effect on every living being and evolutionary forces have installed a powerful endogenous clock in all species for anticipation of daily environmental changes.

Chronobiological understanding of daily rhythmic cycles will help individual to modify the lifestyle and live in synchronization with external clock. 

We are planning short term training courses for school / college students and professionals along with extensive advanced course for post graduate students. The details are as follows:

Introductory Course in Chronobiology
Duration: 1 month   Fees Rs. 2000-00  (Every month starting from May 2018)
Registration link: 

Basic Course in Chronobiology
Duration: 4 months   Fees Rs. 5000-00 (Twice a year July - Oct  &  Jan - Apr)
Registration link: Will be open in June 2018

Advanced Course in Chronobiology
Duration 10 months   Fees Rs. 10000-00 (Once in a year  Aug - May)
Registration link: Will be open in July 2018




Monday, April 2, 2018

Introductory Course in Chronobiology

We are initiating an introductory course in collaboration with Late Prin. B. V. Bhide Foundation. This course will give opportunity for all irrespective of the educational background to understand the basics of biological clock and its effect on us and environment.

The routine certificate course will start in August 2018 for those who are keen in pursuing the subject for further studies.

The details of the course are as follows:

Lecture schedule: Each Saturday & Sunday   5 pm – 6.30 pm 

Duration: 1st - 31st May 2018 

Fees: Rs. 2000-00

Venue: Tilak College of Education, Pune 30

Week No.
Lecture No.
Topics
1
1
Introduction to Chronobiology
History and Overview
1
2
Project assignment and orientation
2
3
Properties & Types of
Biological rhythms
2
4
Statistical  analysis of rhythmic data
3
5
Human circadian organization Ayurvedic & Modern perspective
3
6
Sleep & Circadian research
4
7
Statistical tools – hands on activities
4
8
Open book examination/Valedictory


Register for the course by filling the google form available by clicking the link below:

https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSfcxfyzNaEY7BDoV5IOug4-gI3FYjobHy0NIGlfsSkDwMO_HA/viewform?c=0&w=1