Derk-Jan Dijk (born 1958 in Zwollerkerspel, Netherlands) is a researcher of sleep and circadian rhythms.[1] As at 2024 he is a Distinguished Professor at the University of Surrey and the director of its Sleep Research Centre.[2]
Dijk attended the Meander College in Zwolle. He obtained a BSc and MSc (Cum Laude) in Biology at the University of Groningen. He received his PhD from the Faculty of Medicine at the University of Groningen in 1988, under supervision of the biologist Serge Daan, the physicist Domien Beersma and the psychiatrist Rutger van den Hoofdakker. The focus of his research was on testing the predictions of the two-process model of sleep regulation as developed by Alexander Borbely (1982), Serge Daan and Domien Beersma (1984). Dijk then conducted post-doctoral research at the Institute of Pharmacology at the University of Zurich with Alexander Borbely and was a Faculty Member at Harvard Medical School and an associated neuroscientist at the Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston MA, working closely with Charles Czeisler. Dijk returned to Europe in 1999 to take up a faculty position at the University of Surrey.
Dijk created the Surrey Sleep Research Centre in 2003 and remains its director,[3] leading a team that investigates the regulation and function of sleep and biological rhythms at many different levels of organisation, from gene expression to cognition.[4] In 2005 he became a Professor of Sleep and Physiology. He served as Associate Dean (research) for the Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences (2013-2015).[5]
Dijk was also the Director of Sleep-Wake Research in the University of Surrey's Clinical Research Centre.
Dijk's research focusses on the regulation and function of sleep and its interaction with the circadian timing system in humans.[8] He examines how sleep, sleep regulation and circadian rhythms change across the lifespan and how sleep and circadian rhythms are affected by environmental factors such as natural and artificial light.[9] Dijk researches how individual differences in preferred timing of sleep is related to the biological clock and genetic variations.[10] Dijk serves as a consultant to the pharmaceutical and lighting industry.
Dijk's contribution to sleep research was recognized by the Distinguished Scientist Award from the Sleep Research Society in 2015. This award is the highest award presented by the Sleep Research Society and honors a single individual for research contributions made over an entire career.