Huberman answers listener questions on how light, temperature, exercise, and food schedules tune circadian rhythm, sleep, learning, and mood.

Andrew Huberman (solo) — Professor of neurobiology and ophthalmology at Stanford School of Medicine and host of the Huberman Lab podcast. This is a solo 'office hours' Essentials episode with no guest.
In this Huberman Lab Essentials office-hours episode, Andrew Huberman fields listener questions about circadian biology and practical tools for sleep, wakefulness, and learning. He explains why moonlight, candlelight, and fire don't reset the clock, why window glass and red light weaken or alter light signals, and how melatonin duration encodes day length and season. He covers exercise timing windows tied to body temperature, neuroplasticity tools like cueing learning with odors/tones during sleep and using Non-Sleep Deep Rest (NSDR) to accelerate retention, and a skeptical take on nootropics. He closes on temperature as the body's circadian 'effector' (cold and hot exposure, eating-induced thermogenesis) and encourages self-experimentation with one or two variables at a time.