Impact of light on task-evoked pupil responses during cognitive tasks

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Abstract

Light has many non-image-forming functions including modulation of pupil size and stimulation of alertness and cognition. Part of these non-image-forming effects may be mediated by the brainstem locus coeruleus. The processing of sensory inputs can be associated with a transient pupil dilation that is likely driven in part by the phasic activity of the locus coeruleus. Here, we aimed to characterise the task-evoked pupil response associated with auditory inputs under different light levels and across two cognitive tasks. We continuously monitored the pupil of 20 young healthy participants (24.05y ±4.0; 14 women) while they completed an attentional and an emotional auditory task whilst exposed to repeated 30-to-40s-blocks of light interleaved with darkness periods. Blocks could either consist of monochromatic orange light [0.16 melanopic Equivalent Daylight Illuminance (EDI) lux] or blue-enriched white light of three different levels [37, 92, 190 melanopic EDI lux; 6500K]. For the analysis 15 and then 14 participants were included in the attentional and emotional tasks respectively. Generalized Linear Mixed Models showed a significant main effect of light level on the task-evoked pupil responses triggered by the attentional and emotional tasks ( p ≤.0001). The impact of light was different for the target vs. non-target stimulus of the attentional task but was not different for the emotional and neutral stimulus of the emotional task. Despite a smaller sustained pupil size during brighter light blocks, a higher light level triggers a stronger task-evoked pupil response to auditory stimulation, presumably through the recruitment of the locus coeruleus.

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europepmc
last seen: 2026-05-19T01:45:01.086888+00:00