“…Despite the SCN's role as the primary oscillator, circadian clocks exist in nearly every organ and tissue including peripheral organs such as the liver ( Tahara and Shibata, 2016 ), and in brain regions such as the hippocampus ( Debski et al., 2020 ). Specifically, the hippocampus is a brain region involved in emotional regulation ( Hajszan et al., 2010 ; Altar, 1999 ), it is sensitive to stress, glucocorticoids ( McEwen, 2008 ) and chronic light treatment ( Bedrosian et al., 2011 ; Chen et al., 2021 ), and diseases such as epilepsy reset hippocampal circadian oscillations ( Debski et al., 2020 ). Abrupt changes of external signals that are experienced during global travel or rotating shift work, including changes in timing of light exposure and food intake, may lead to desynchronization of internal circadian rhythms and cause mood disturbances ( Reinberg and Ashkenazi, 2008 ).…”