Open a window for better sleep? Study explores

Lyngby, Denmark — Better work performance could be tied to the air quality in your bedroom while you sleep, a team of Danish researchers has concluded.

The researchers conducted a field intervention of 40 bedrooms in Denmark over a two-week period and tracked participants’ sleep quality via a wearable monitoring device. The participants also kept an electronic log of their daily activities and sleep. Each morning, they underwent a three-minute cognitive-abilities test.

With windows open, 87% of the participants said they experienced deep sleep, compared with 70% of those who slept with their windows closed. The next morning, participants who slept with an open window also performed better on the cognitive test.

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“This suggests that bedrooms should be ventilated with clean outdoor air or supplied with air equivalent to clean outdoor air during the night,” said lead study author Xiaojun Fan, a doctoral student at Technical University of Denmark.

The study was published online in the journal Building and Environment.

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