Updated
Updated · BBC.com · Jun 29
Research Links Sunsets to 5 Health Gains, Boosting Memory, Sleep and Altruism
Updated
Updated · BBC.com · Jun 29

Research Links Sunsets to 5 Health Gains, Boosting Memory, Sleep and Altruism

2 articles · Updated · BBC.com · Jun 29

Summary

  • Studies reviewed in the report suggest watching sunsets and sunrises can ease anxiety and depression while improving memory, creativity, sleep quality and prosocial behavior.
  • A 2023 study of more than 2,500 participants found sunsets were especially effective at eliciting awe, an emotion researchers say interrupts negative thought loops and shifts attention outward.
  • Experiments also tied awe to sharper recall and lower stress: one film study found the awe group remembered a story most accurately, while an 8-week walking study showed older adults became more outward-focused.
  • In a study of 200 people, those reporting more joy and awe had the lowest inflammatory cytokine levels, a marker linked to lower risks of diabetes, cardiovascular disease and depression.
  • Light researchers say sunsets also help regulate the 24-hour circadian rhythm by lowering cortisol and supporting melatonin release, while a 2024 study found LED lighting that mimics sunrise and sunset hues improved rhythm alignment.

Insights

Can specially designed LED lights truly replace the profound psychological and biological benefits of a real sunset?
Is it the sunrise itself, or the digital detox of watching it, that truly boosts our mental health?
If awe reduces inflammation, could prescribed 'sunset viewings' become a future form of medicine for chronic disease?