Thermoregulation: Sleep’s Biological Thermostat
22 de February, 2026

Chronotypes: The Genetics Behind Your Internal Clock

Scientific Discovery

Whether you are a morning or night person is largely genetic, determined by polymorphisms in the CLOCK and PER genes. This dictates your peaks of alertness and hormone release.

Data in Focus

  • Morning Types (Larks): ~40% of the population. Peak alertness in early hours.
  • Evening Types (Owls): ~30% of the population. Melatonin is released much later; peak productivity is in the late afternoon/evening.
  • Intermediates: ~30% who adapt with more flexibility.

The Human Engineering Perspective

  • For the Patient: We don’t force an “owl” to be a “lark.” Trying to force an evening person to sleep at 9 PM creates “early-night insomnia.” We adjust life to the gene.
  • In Organizations: “Morning bias” in companies costs millions in lost productivity. Respecting chronotypes reduces human error and burnout.

Clinical Evidence: “We don’t choose our height or eye color; we don’t choose our chronotype either. True performance comes when we align our schedule with our genetic heritage.”

Did you know? Being a “night owl” isn’t a lack of willpower; it’s genetics. In prehistoric times, having group members with different schedules was a survival strategy: while the “larks” slept, the “owls” kept watch against predators.

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