Why do heart attacks strike in the morning and why is late-night eating a metabolic risk? For too long we have viewed time as a social construct, but biology keeps a strict schedule. Circadian Networks reveals that we are governed not by a single brain clock, but by an orchestra of billions of cellular timers. This book is essential for science enthusiasts and curious minds seeking to understand the precise temporal machinery driving health, moving far beyond simple sleep advice to the root mechanisms of biological time.
Readers will journey from the suprachiasmatic nucleus, the brain's master conductor, to the autonomous rhythms ticking inside the liver, heart, and immune system. You will discover how light and food act as competing time-setters, causing internal jet lag even without travel. The text explores the molecular mechanics of sleep pressure and delves into chronotherapy, an emerging field where the timing of a cancer treatment or blood pressure medication determines whether it cures or harms.
Written with clarity and depth, this volume strips away wellness trends to focus on hard science. It offers a concise tour of chronobiology, connecting molecular loops in our genes to the realities of shift work and aging. This is a rigorous guide to the invisible metronomes that pace our lives.













