Man

Charmane Eastman

Professor

Rush University

Massachusetts, Estados Unidos

Líneas de Investigación


Shift work, jet lag, human circadian rhythms (especially effects of bright light and melatonin), social jet lag, circadian misalignment

Educación

  •  Biological Psychology, University of Chicago. Estados Unidos, 1980
  •  Biological Psychology, University of Chicago. Chile, 1976
  •  Mathematics, State University of New York at Albany (SUNY). Chile, 1965

Experiencia Académica

  •   Professor Full Time

    Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

    New York, Estados Unidos

    1998 - A la fecha

  •   Associate Professor Full Time

    Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

    New York, Estados Unidos

    1989 - 1998

  •   Assistant Professor Full Time

    Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

    New York, Estados Unidos

    1983 - 1989

Experiencia Profesional

  •   Research Assistant Other

    Harvard

    Massachusetts, Estados Unidos

    1965 - 1968

  •   Research Assistant Other

    M.I.T.

    Massachusetts, Estados Unidos

    1968 - 1969

  •   Research Assistant Other

    University of California

    Berkeley, Estados Unidos

    1969 - 1974

  •   Laboratory Coordinator Other

    Rush University Medical Center

    New York, Estados Unidos

    1983 - 1987

  •   Founder and Director of the Biological Rhythms Research Laboratory Other

    Rush University Medical Center

    New York, Estados Unidos

    1987 - 2013


 

Article (76)

Circadian Phase Advances in Response to Weekend Morning Light in Adolescents With Short Sleep and Late Bedtimes on School Nights
Circadian phase, circadian period and chronotype are reproducible over months
Late bedtimes prevent circadian phase advances to morning bright light in adolescents
Advancing the sleep/wake schedule impacts the sleep of African-Americans more than European-Americans
Diagnosis and Treatment of Non-24-h Sleep-Wake Disorder in the Blind
Human Adolescent Phase Response Curves to Bright White Light
Sex and ancestry determine the free-running circadian period
Sleep and cognitive performance of African-Americans and European-Americans before and during circadian misalignment produced by an abrupt 9-h delay in the sleep/wake schedule
Circadian rhythms of European and African-Americans after a large delay of sleep as in jet lag and night work
Circadian rhythm phase shifts and endogenous free-running circadian period differ between African-Americans and European-Americans
Entraining the free-running circadian clocks of blind people
Phase advancing human circadian rhythms with morning bright light, afternoon melatonin, and gradually shifted sleep: can we reduce morning bright-light duration?
Melatonin in the afternoons of a gradually advancing sleep schedule enhances the circadian rhythm phase advance
Blacks (African Americans) Have Shorter Free-Running Circadian Periods Than Whites (Caucasian Americans)
Human phase response curve to intermittent blue light using a commercially available device
How to Get a Bigger Dose of Bright Light
Human Phase Response Curves to Three Days of Daily Melatonin: 0.5 mg Versus 3.0 mg
A Compromise Circadian Phase Position for Permanent Night Work Improves Mood, Fatigue, and Performance
Phase advancing the human circadian clock with blue-enriched polychromatic light
Phase Delaying the Human Circadian Clock with Blue-Enriched Polychromatic Light
Practical Interventions to Promote Circadian Adaptation to Permanent Night Shift Work: Study 4
Racial Differences in the Human Endogenous Circadian Period
A three pulse phase response curve to three milligrams of melatonin in humans
Human tau in an ultradian light-dark cycle
Night Shift Performance is Improved by a Compromise Circadian Phase Position: Study 3. Circadian Phase after 7 Night Shifts with an Intervening Weekend Off
Shaping the light/dark pattern for circadian adaptation to night shift work
A compromise phase position for permanent night shift workers: Circadian phase after two night shifts with scheduled sleep and light/dark exposure
A late wake time phase delays the human dim light melatonin rhythm
Advancing human circadian rhythms with afternoon melatonin and morning intermittent bright light
Short nights reduce light-induced circadian phase delays in humans
Advancing circadian rhythms before eastward flight: A strategy to prevent or reduce jet lag
Circadian phase determined from melatonin profiles is reproducible after 1 wk in subjects who sleep later on weekends
How to trick mother nature into letting you fly around or stay up all night
Morning melatonin has limited benefit as a soporific for daytime sleep after night work
Short nights attenuate light-induced circadian phase advances in humans
The dim light melatonin onset following fixed and free sleep schedules
Bright light therapy for winter depression - Is phase advancing beneficial?
Complete or partial circadian re-entrainment improves performance, alertness, and mood during night-shift work
Early versus late bedtimes phase shift the human dim light melatonin rhythm despite a fixed morning lights on time
Circadian phase-shifting effects of nocturnal exercise in older compared with young adults
Combinations of bright light, scheduled dark, sunglasses, and melatonin to facilitate circadian entrainment to night shift work
Preflight adjustment to eastward travel: 3 days of advancing sleep with and without morning bright light
Bright light, dark and melatonin can promote circadian adaptation in night shift workers
Melatonin phase shifts human circadian rhythms in a placebo-controlled simulated night-work study
Sleep logs of young adults with self-selected sleep times predict the dim light melatonin onset
The effects of prior light history on the suppression of melatonin by light in humans
Effects of melatonin administration on daytime sleep after simulated night shift work
Failure of extraocular light to facilitate circadian rhythm reentrainment in humans
Individual differences in the phase and amplitude of the human circadian temperature rhythm: with an emphasis on morningness-eveningness
How to use light and dark to produce circadian adaptation to night shift work
Intermittent bright light and exercise to entrain human circadian rhythms to night work
Nocturnal melatonin secretion is not suppressed by light exposure behind the knee in humans
Bright light treatment of winter depression - A placebo-controlled trial
Conflicting bright light exposure during night shifts impedes circadian adaptation
CIRCADIAN-RHYTHM ADAPTATION TO SIMULATED NIGHT-SHIFT WORK - EFFECT OF NOCTURNAL BRIGHT-LIGHT DURATION
LIGHT TREATMENT FOR NASA SHIFTWORKERS
Light treatment for sleep disorders: Consensus report .1. Chronology of seminal studies in humans
Light treatment for sleep disorders: Consensus report .2. Basic properties of circadian physiology and sleep regulation
Light treatment for sleep disorders: Consensus report .3. Alerting and activating effects
Light treatment for sleep disorders: Consensus report .4. Sleep phase and duration disturbances
Light treatment for sleep disorders: Consensus report .5. Age-related disturbances
Light treatment for sleep disorders: Consensus report .6. Shift work
Light treatment for sleep disorders: Consensus report .7. Jet lag
PHASE-SHIFTING HUMAN CIRCADIAN-RHYTHMS WITH EXERCISE DURING THE NIGHT-SHIFT
DARK GOGGLES AND BRIGHT LIGHT IMPROVE CIRCADIAN-RHYTHM ADAPTATION TO NIGHT-SHIFT WORK
EVENING ALCOHOL-CONSUMPTION ALTERS THE CIRCADIAN-RHYTHM OF BODY-TEMPERATURE
CIRCADIAN-RHYTHMS DURING GRADUALLY DELAYING AND ADVANCING SLEEP AND LIGHT SCHEDULES
THE CIRCADIAN-RHYTHM OF TEMPERATURE DURING LIGHT TREATMENT FOR WINTER DEPRESSION
A PLACEBO-CONTROLLED TRIAL OF LIGHT TREATMENT FOR WINTER DEPRESSION
HIGH-INTENSITY LIGHT FOR CIRCADIAN ADAPTATION TO A 12-H SHIFT OF THE SLEEP SCHEDULE
THE TEMPORAL ONSET OF INDIVIDUAL SYMPTOMS IN WINTER DEPRESSION - DIFFERENTIATING UNDERLYING MECHANISMS
ENTRAINMENT OF CIRCADIAN-RHYTHMS WITH 26-H BRIGHT LIGHT AND SLEEP-WAKE SCHEDULES
NATURAL SUMMER AND WINTER SUNLIGHT EXPOSURE PATTERNS IN SEASONAL AFFECTIVE-DISORDER
THE CIRCADIAN-RHYTHM OF TEMPERATURE IN HUMANS DURING A 26-HR SLEEP-WAKE SCHEDULE
SUPRACHIASMATIC NUCLEI LESIONS ELIMINATE CIRCADIAN TEMPERATURE AND SLEEP RHYTHMS IN THE RAT
CIRCADIAN TEMPERATURE AND WAKE RHYTHMS OF RATS EXPOSED TO PROLONGED CONTINUOUS ILLUMINATION
76
Charmane Eastman

Professor

Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Rush Medical College

Rush University

Massachusetts, Estados Unidos