Research Shows That Finding New Activities in Darker Months Can Help With Seasonal Depression—New Hampshire Public Radio

Read article—Features comments by Robert Brady, an associate professor of psychiatry, about seasonal depression. "Most commonly, although not exclusively, that aligns with kind of the late fall, early winter for the start of the symptoms and then the remission of those symptoms at the end of winter as spring is coming," Brady said. "Around the equator during the summer, it's brutally hot. People don't want to be outside in those conditions then. And so you actually see (seasonal affective disorder) occurring there as well." (Picked up by The Keene Sentinel.)