Human-Centric Lighting: Foundational Considerations and a Five-Step Design Process

Front Neurol. 2021 Jan 27:12:630553. doi: 10.3389/fneur.2021.630553. eCollection 2021.

Abstract

At its best, human-centric lighting considers the visual and non-visual effects of light in support of positive human outcomes. At its worst, it is a marketing phrase used to healthwash lighting products or lighting design solutions. There is no doubt that environmental lighting contributes to human health, but how might one practice human-centric lighting given both the credible potential and the implausible hype? Marketing literature is filled with promises. Technical lighting societies have summarized the science but have not yet offered design guidance. Meanwhile, designers are in the middle, attempting to distinguish credible knowledge from that which is dubious to make design decisions that affect people directly. This article is intended to: (1) empower the reader with fundamental understandings of ways in which light affects health; (2) provide a process for human-centric lighting design that can dovetail with the decision-making process that is already a part of a designer's workflow.

Keywords: alertness; circadian light effects; human-centric lighting; lighting quality; non-visual action of light.

Publication types

  • Review