Earth Notes: General Bibliography (bhadra2026bedrooms)
General public bibliography for EOU and related research. #bibliography #dataset
- [bhadra2026bedrooms] Bhadra, Jaydeep and Beizaee, Arash and Hartescu, Iuliana and Lomas, Kevin The effects of bed cooling on sleep quality and sleep thermal comfort in overheated bedrooms (accessed ), Elsevier BV, , Building and Environment, volume 291, ISSN 0360-1323, doi:10.1016/j.buildenv.2026.114213, article/pages 114213 (article) (BibTeX).
keywords
overheated bedrooms, personal comfort, bed cooling system, thermal comfort, sleep quality
abstract
Elevated night-time temperatures in bedrooms on hot summer nights impairs sleep quality and sleep thermal comfort. Passive and low energy night-time cooling strategies can enhance individuals' comfort without relying on air conditioning. This study evaluates the impact of a low-energy, water-based cooling mattress topper on sleep thermal comfort and quality in healthy adults sleeping in overheated UK bedrooms. Seventeen participants took part in repeated-measures controlled-bedroom experiments consisting of three stages: (1) baseline sleep in their own bedrooms under normal summer conditions, (2) sleep on a standard bedding system in a bedroom controlled at 30°C, and (3) sleep in the same overheated bedroom with the cooling mattress topper. Objective sleep metrics were recorded using wrist actigraphy, while subjective thermal comfort and sleep quality were assessed using validated questionnaires. The cooling mattress topper was found to significantly improve sleep thermal comfort metrics (p < 0.05) with large effect sizes (r = 0.71 to 0.93). Substantial improvements in perceived sleep quality and a reduction in time spent awake were also reported. Actigraphy data showed that use of bed cooling restored total sleep time to baseline levels and reduced Sleep Onset Latency by ten minutes compared to using standard bedding. The findings suggest that targeted bed cooling is an effective, low-energy solution for mitigating sleep disruption in overheated bedrooms, and for mitigating the effects of increasing summertime temperatures in UK homes. There is an urgent need for sleep-specific overheating standards for UK homes.
note
[[**CS1] Quote: "Sleep is regulated by a complex interplay between environmental, physiological and psychological factors, with thermal conditions playing a central role." Quote: "Controlled experiments often identify an optimal range of 16–19°C for promoting rapid sleep onset and stable sleep architecture, particularly in temperate regions."]