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Early in the day, in the morning hours, you need a lot of bright light, ideally from sunlight, to be very alert and to wake up. But in the evening hours and nighttime hours, it takes very little light, very few photons, in order to wake up your brain and body and to disrupt your circadian clock and disrupt your
sleep.
Andrew Huberman
Viewing Artificial Overhead Light Before Bed Destroys Sleep Quality
Sleep Toolkit: Tools for Optimizing Sleep & Sleep-Wake Timing
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