A recent study shows that a person’s metabolism does not stay the same for 24 hours — in fact, there are times of the day where their body is chewing through a greater number of calories while they are just sitting there.

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According to a new study, a person’s energy-burning ability fluctuates across the day.

The research, published in Current Biology, shows that our body’s internal clock may have more to do with how we process calories than previously thought.

While sitting around in the late afternoon and early evening may not feel that much different from sitting around in the morning, a person burns 10 percent more calories later in the day.

Everyone burns calories no matter what they are doing, even while they are taking a nap.

The human body needs calories and uses them to supply the body with the energy it requires to function properly.

To find out a little more about our internal calorie-burning capabilities, the researchers carried out a study on seven people. The participants stayed in an isolated laboratory setting that had no windows, clocks, phones, or Internet. This meant they had no clues as to what time of day it was.

Each person was assigned a time to go to bed, and a time to wake up, and throughout the 3-week study, those times were adjusted 4 hours later each day. Essentially, this was comparable with “circling the globe every week.”

Since their bodies were not able to settle into a rhythm because they were sleeping and waking at different times every day, they developed their own patterns. The researchers measured their metabolic rate at different times of the day to determine how their bodies dealt with calorie consumption all around the clock.

They discovered that metabolic rate was lowest late during their biological “night,” and highest around 12 hours later, in the biological “afternoon and evening.”

“The fact that doing the same thing at one time of day burned so many more calories than doing the same thing at a different time of day surprised us,” says lead author Kirsi-Marja Zitting of the Division of Sleep and Circadian Disorders at Brigham and Women’s Hospital and Harvard Medical School, both in Boston, MA.

Humans burn calories no matter what they do, whether they are sleeping in a bed, walking around the block, or running a marathon.

People take in calories through food and drink and use those calories up by breathing, digesting foods, and with every movement they make. The more a person moves, the more calories they burn.

People often turn to calorie-counting when they are hoping to lose some weight because when a person burns more calories than they take in, they tend to lose weight.

Everyone has their own personal resting metabolic rate, which is a measure of how quickly the body uses up energy. The study revealed that this rate fluctuates throughout the day.

If our bodies burn calories a little faster in the afternoon to early evening, it might be a good idea to make lunch the biggest meal of the day instead of dinner.

Jeanne Duffy, also in the Division of Sleep and Circadian Disorders at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, says:

“It is not only what we eat, but when we eat — and rest — that impacts how much energy we burn or store as fat. Regularity of habits, such as eating and sleeping, is very important to overall health.”

This team plans to study how appetite and the body’s response to food differ depending on the time of day. They also want to investigate how sleep — how long and how often a person sleeps — affects their body’s response to food.