Circadian Stimulus (CS)

Definition:
Circadian stimulus (CS) is a metric developed by the Lighting Research Center (LRC) to estimate the acute melatonin-suppression response to light at the eye. It models how spectrum and intensity combine to influence the circadian system, returning a value from 0.1 (low effect) to 0.7+ (strong effect) under defined viewing conditions.

Why it matters:
CS gives designers and researchers a practical way to predict biological impact when planning light levels and spectra for workplaces, schools, healthcare and aged care. It complements visual metrics (e.g., lux, TM-30) by focusing on non-visual outcomes such as alertness and sleep timing.

How it works (summary):

  • Takes spectral power distribution and illuminance at the eye.
  • Applies a model of the circadian pathway (with weighting to short-wavelength content).
  • Outputs a dimensionless CS value linked to expected melatonin suppression for a standard exposure.

Relation to melanopic EDI (CIE S 026):

  • CS is an LRC modelling framework predicting melatonin suppression.
  • Melanopic EDI (sometimes MEDI) is a CIE S 026 metric that standardises circadian-effective illuminance relative to daylight (D65).
  • They address similar aims but are not directly interchangeable; some projects report both.

Applications:

  • Daytime lighting scenes that support alertness.
  • Evening scenes with lower circadian activation to protect sleep.
  • Post-occupancy evaluations and field studies using spectral light dosimeters.

Related terms:

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