Light exposure is an essential driver of health and well-being, and individual behaviours during rest and activity modulate physiologically relevant aspects of light exposure. Further understanding the behaviours that influence individual photic exposure patterns may provide insight into the volitional contributions to the physiological effects of light and guide behavioural points of intervention. Here, we present a novel, self-reported and psychometrically validated inventory to capture light exposure-related behaviour, the Light Exposure Behaviour Assessment (LEBA).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Light and alertness studies have applied different measurement methodologies to determine lighting conditions. However, it has been demonstrated that researchers rarely measure or describe the lighting conditions of their studies in sufficient detail to generalize conclusions or derive universal guidelines.
Objective: Part I of this paper summarizes the current measurement methodologies used in light and alertness studies to potentially identify methodological issues.
Background: The non-image-forming effects of luminous radiation on people with intellectual disabilities or dementia received attention from researchers. Such studies, however, have generally been conducted using disparate methodologies which precludes generalization and reproducibility.
Objective: The aim of this study was to determine the practical applicability of measurement devices for studies investigating non-image-forming effects of luminous radiation, specifically for people with intellectual disabilities or dementia.
Changes of the oil-water interfacial tension resulting from binding of Fusarium solani pisi cutinase and subsequent lipid hydrolysis were investigated using the oil drop technique. An ELISA was developed to determine the amount of cutinase bound to the triolein-water interface after biotinylation of the enzyme. Cutinase irreversibly adsorbs to a maximum value of about 2 mg/m2.
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