Screentime Can Make You Feel Sick

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Do you ever feel like the light of your computer screen is burrowing into your eyes and making your head pulse? Or feel dizzy or nauseous after looking at your phone? While you might think these sensations are just eye strain or fatigue from looking at your screen for too long, they’re actually symptoms of a condition called cybersickness.

These issues may seem like a necessary evil with the rise of work from home, remote learning and days spent endlessly scrolling online. But I can assure you as a researcher in human computer interaction specializing in cybersickness that there are ways to anticipate and avoid feeling sick from your screens.

What is cybersickness?

Cybersickness refers to a cluster of symptoms that occur in the absence of physical motion, similar to motion sickness. These symptoms fall into three categories: nausea, oculomotor issues and general disorientation. Oculomotor symptoms, like eye strain, fatigue and headaches, involve overworking the nerve that controls eye movement. Disorientation can manifest as dizziness and vertigo. And several cybersickness symptoms, such as difficulty concentrating and blurred vision, overlap categories. These issues can persist for hours and affect sleep quality.

People can experience symptoms of cybersickness through everyday devices like computers, phones and TV. For instance, Apple released a parallax effect on iPhone lock screens in 2013 that made the background image seem like it floated or shifted when a user moved their phone around, which many people found extremely uncomfortable. As it turns out, this was because it triggered cybersickness symptoms. Parallax scrolling on websites, where a background image remains static while foreground content moves as you scroll, can also elicit these symptoms.

Read more at NextGov.

{Matzav.com}


2 COMMENTS

  1. Due to the outbreak of Cybersickness among computer users, the Center For Computer Disease Control [CCDC] is now recommending that computer users wear sleep masks over their eyes when using their computers. The CCDC also recommends that computer users practice computer distancing when using their computers by maintaining a distance of 6 feet from their computers. Additionally, there appears to be a new variant of Cybersickness that effects people who stare at walls for a long period of time. The CCDC recommends that Wall starers also wear sleep masks when staring at their walls, or when staring at anyone else’s wall – and that they maintain a distance of 6 feet from theirs, or anyone else’s wall. The CCDC will continue to monitor this menacing computer disease, and will update the Cyber community on any new revelations that come to light.
    In the meantime, stare safely, scroll and click safely, and stay safe.

  2. Did you know that Microsoft has a copy of everything and anything that’s on your computer? Every time you make a Windows update or download an anti-virus, all your stuff gets automatically updated to their databases and to the database of the anti-virus program.
    Bill Gates’ antivirus programs are just like Bill Gates’ facine. Every time someone gets a jib, it automatically causes a surge in Covid and voila! a new variant is created. The more jibs, the higher the Covid surge. People who take it, don’t realize that they’re the cause for the Covid surge.

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