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Volume 1 Issue 11, November 2023

Light exposure and mental health

The November issue’s cover references a study published this month by Burns et al. detailing patterns of increased night-time light exposure associated with greater risk and increased daytime light exposure associated with decreased risk of psychiatric disorders and self-harm. The authors suggested a sunflower and the dynamics of heliotropism (i.e., a plant following the sun’s trajectory) as a metaphor for the effects of light on mental health and the possibility of its future use as an intervention.

See our Editorial for more on light and the potential effects of urbanization and urbanicity on mental health.

Cover design: Marina Spence

Editorial

  • The world’s population is becoming increasingly urbanized, which brings new considerations for the effects of urbanicity on physical and mental health. Despite the complexity, there is a tremendous opportunity for research to use new tools to examine the reciprocal relationship between mental health and urban environments to improve outcomes and communities.

    Editorial

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Correspondence

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Comment & Opinion

  • This Comment proposes to increase knowledge of the effects of urbanicity on brain and mental health by linking existing human spatial data with macroenvironmental and regional socioeconomic data. It introduces hypothesis-free models to capture the data and model life in the city and suggests refinements for future studies into conditions that will soon affect the majority of the earth’s population.

    • Gunter Schumann
    Comment
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News & Views

  • Numerous randomized placebo-controlled studies over the past two decades have shown that ketamine has a rapid antidepressant action. However, its acute transient effects on cognition and perception are likely to unmask study-arm assignment. Now, the use of surgical anesthesia to conceal treatment assignment finds high rates of rapid antidepressant response among participants, regardless of whether they are randomized to ketamine or placebo.

    • Gerard Sanacora
    • Luana Colloca
    News & Views
  • Robust 24-hour light–dark cycles are crucial for healthy circadian rhythms. A study now shows that there is an independent association between increased light at night and decreased light during the day with a variety of mental health disorders.

    • Jamie M. Zeitzer
    News & Views
  • After the hindrance imposed by the COVID-19 pandemic, neuroscience research pushed forward. NeuroFrance 2023 took place as an in-person meeting and highlighted current and future strategies for exploring the brain and its pathologies, including a strong pathway to mental health research.

    • Glenn Dallérac
    • Armelle Rancillac
    Meeting Report
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Reviews

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Research

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Amendments & Corrections

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