How jet lag impairs Major League Baseball performance
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Edited by Joseph S. Takahashi, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX, and approved December 13, 2016 (received for review June 1, 2016)

Significance
Although circadian clocks have been studied extensively in controlled laboratory settings, examining the function and misalignment of these biological clocks in natural settings has been more challenging. Here, we examined data from Major League Baseball (MLB) where players frequently travel long distances in the east–west direction. By using 20 years of MLB data, we found the effect of jet lag to be context dependent and remarkably specific. Overall, our findings demonstrate how circadian misalignment can impact specific features of human performance in natural settings.
Abstract
Laboratory studies have demonstrated that circadian clocks align physiology and behavior to 24-h environmental cycles. Examination of athletic performance has been used to discern the functions of these clocks in humans outside of controlled settings. Here, we examined the effects of jet lag, that is, travel that shifts the alignment of 24-h environmental cycles relative to the endogenous circadian clock, on specific performance metrics in Major League Baseball. Accounting for potential differences in home and away performance, travel direction, and team confounding variables, we observed that jet-lag effects were largely evident after eastward travel with very limited effects after westward travel, consistent with the >24-h period length of the human circadian clock. Surprisingly, we found that jet lag impaired major parameters of home-team offensive performance, for example, slugging percentage, but did not similarly affect away-team offensive performance. On the other hand, jet lag impacted both home and away defensive performance. Remarkably, the vast majority of these effects for both home and away teams could be explained by a single measure, home runs allowed. Rather than uniform effects, these results reveal surprisingly specific effects of circadian misalignment on athletic performance under natural conditions.
Footnotes
- ↵1To whom correspondence should be addressed. Email: r-allada{at}northwestern.edu.
Author contributions: T.S. and R.A. designed research; A.S. and T.S. performed research; A.S., T.S., and R.A. analyzed data; and A.S., T.S., and R.A. wrote the paper.
The authors declare no conflict of interest.
This article is a PNAS Direct Submission.
This article contains supporting information online at www.pnas.org/lookup/suppl/doi:10.1073/pnas.1608847114/-/DCSupplemental.
Freely available online through the PNAS open access option.
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