Hi folks. Ever since I found out I suffer from eye strain, I have been reading/researching about it on the net. To find a solution for our eye strain issue, we need to know the cause of it. Here is what I found so far:

For people with normal vision, the cause of eye strain are mainly:

A. Looking at screen that is too bright
B. Looking at the screen too long without break

These are what I call normal cause-and-effect. For majority of people, this is the main cause of their eye strain. But for small minority of the population, like most people here in this forum, in addition to the above, we also suffer eye strain from other factors, such as:

  1. Pulse Width Modulation (PWM) flickering
  2. Graphics Driver
  3. Temporal Dithering
  4. Blurry Font/Anti-aliasing
  5. Blue light
  6. Other?

To further complicate matters, people may suffer from multiple causes of eye strain (and may not even realize it).

Take me for example. I first discovered that I have eye strain problem 4 years ago when I switched my laptop from a CCFL based display to an LED-based display (which later I found has PWM). On my old CCFL laptop, I can use it for hours without a problem. On my (then) new LED-based laptop, I get eye strain within minutes of using it. Lucky I found a workaround solution that allows me to use a laptop with PWM without giving me eye strain. So for a long time, I thought my only source of eye strain is PWM.

Then 2 years later, I upgraded the intel graphics driver, and my laptop which I have been able to use for years, suddenly causes eye strain to me. I switched back to my old graphics driver, then the eye strain gone. So I know for certain that (intel) graphics driver also caused eye strain to me.

So for me, I suffer from #1 and #2.

I guess I was lucky because each cause of eye strain happened to me one at a time, so I was able to detect and pinpoint the cause each time. So if I were to buy a smartphone or tablet, I would check for PWM first. But even is there are no PWM, there is still a possibility that the graphics driver can cause me eye strain. At least I know what to look out for, and what to avoid. But different people may have different (combinations of) causes of eye strain.

For someone who gets eye strain when looking at LED-based display but do not know the exact cause, then hopefully this thread will help to identify and test which of the above 6 factors cause eye strain to them. Let's share what we know about the factors that can cause eye strain to us, things like:

What it is?
How to detect it?
How to solve it?

The last part is the most important part - what solution works (or doesn't work for you).

    I'll start with what I know:

    1. Pulse Width Modulation (PWM) flickering

    What is it?
    PWM is a method used to increase and decrease brightness of LED-based display. PWM produces screen flickering which is not detectable with naked eye, but can be detected using smartphone cameras. These flickering can cause eye strain to certain people.

    How to detect it?
    PWM can be detected using a smart phone camera, especially older ones. Newer smartphone camera sometimes could not detect the flickering because of the advanced auto-correct shutter speed that it uses. PWM can also be detected by using the Blur Trail test from this site: http://www.testufo.com/#test=blurtrail

    How to solve it?
    Most LED display that uses PWM, the flickering can be eliminated by setting the brightness to 100%. The downside is that the screen becomes too bright and need third party display program to reduce the brightness / contrast artificially. However, for some display, there are still flickering even when increasing the brightness to 100%, especially on certain Samsung display.

    Additional info:
    https://discussions.apple.com/thread/1677617
    http://www.tftcentral.co.uk/articles/pulse_width_modulation.htm
    http://www.eizoglobal.com/library/basics/eyestrain/

    1. Graphics Driver

    What is it?
    Certain graphics driver, especially newer Intel graphics driver can cause eye strain. Certain updates in operating system (e.g. android, blackberry, IOS) can also cause eye strain.

    How to detect it?
    As far as I know, there is no known way to detect it, except you feel eye strain when looking at the screen. The challenge is to determine if the eye strain that you are feeling is because of graphics driver, or because of other factors.

    How to solve it?
    Use older version (if available), or use Standard VGA (Win 7) or Microsoft Basic Display (Win 8) driver. Standard VGA has its drawback, such as graphics will be slower and cant use projector, but at least you wont get eye strain. I read that on Windows 10, even Standard VGA driver can now cause eye strain. So need to be wary of that. Several of us has highlighted this issue at the Intel forum, and Intel graphics team are investigating this to find a solution. You can follow the discussion here:
    https://communities.intel.com/thread/53309

    3 months later

    This is very important. We have to be able to tell the manufactures the exact reason in order for them to believe this. Otherwise it will just sound like a problem of our eyes which has nothing to do with their products. But unfortunately, after many years of suffering from computer, smart phone, TV screens, I still cannot pinpoint the reason for my screen-induced headaches mostly because I have zero-tolerance to investigate that. I only do what I have to do on computers to keep my job.

    I started to get headaches from computers around 2009, before that, I had no problems at all. I am a long time follower of that apple forum thread. At some point, I thought projectors solved my problem, but it turns out that is not the case. One of the difficulties for me to identify the source of headaches was that I had multiple screen exposures (computer, smart phone, TV, etc) in my daily life. For a while, I kept using smart phones because I thought it is just the computer screens causing the problem. Recently, after reading posts from this forum, I find out the evil is actually the smart phone and my computer screen (an external monitor) is not that bad. When severeness of the symptom passes a certain threshold, I can easily get headaches from any screen exposure , even from reading a black white paper.

    To detect the cause, I think the first important thing is stay away from all screens (or take some medicine if necessary) to make sure you are symptom free before testing any device. And then carefully select some products for testing, for example, those that have been suggested in this forum. That is what I am going to do in the next few weeks.

    Jerry, yes. The thing about eye strain is that it is quite a complex issue, with multiple sources of eye strain, and that a person may actually suffer from multiple causes of eye strain, which makes it harder to isolate and identify each one. You have the right idea already, I know it is hard and time consuming, but you must take the time to isolate and identify the causes of your eye strain. If you dont do it, nobody is going to do it, and the problem may never be solved.

    Perhaps you can try something like, every weekend (when you are not working), every saturday or sunday, limit yourself to just one display devices e.g. first saturday, phone only. Dont view any other display devices like tablets, TVs etc on that day. It is going to be hard, but it has to be done. Then see if you get eye strain or not from your phone. If your phone causes you eye strain, then you may need to find another phone. There is not much we can do if a phone causes eye strain. Same for tablet. I cannot use LG tablets at all, I get very severe eye strain within 2 minutes of using. Some tablets are not so bad i..e mild eye strain. I have my 4-year old ipad mini which i get zero eye strain, and that is the one and only tablet that I am still using until today. I do not even dare to upgrade the OS, for fear the new OS might cause eye strain. If it aint broke, dont fix it. At least I have one tablet model that I can use with zero eye strain. There might be one that you can use with zero eye strain as well, but the search for it will take time and lots of testing/trial and error. Good luck.

      Kray Thanks for your suggestions. I think now I have a good idea how to start the diagnosis process. When I first had the problem around 2009, I just did not realize or could not believe computer screen can cause headaches. It was not instant headaches to me though. I used to watching TV and movies a lot on computers, but I did not feel headaches when I was watching (maybe because I was too focused on the movie). The headaches hit me hard afterward and bothered my sleep and stay almost constantly. However, if I watch movies again, I would not feel the headaches, so watching movie gave a break but made things worse at the same time. I saw headache clinic doctors, they never ever mentioned computer screens could cause headaches. They scanned my head with MRI, but the results look normal. I never thought about computer screen being the cause until I read that eye strain thread in the apple forum.

      I will try one device at a time for the diagnosis. I am pretty sure smart phones give me headaches, so I wont try them for now. I ordered a BQ2760HS and a Dell desktop with nVidia GeForce® GT 730 graphics card. We'll see how it goes. I will report back. By the way, currently I have old Dell ST2310 LCD monitor, I can use it for checking emails, offices, some internet surfing. It is not perfect, but I can live with it.

      So glad to see this list get puled together. I thought I was crazy with the results of some of my experiments, but graphics driver trigger would explain all of them. Multiple times I have been triggered by a screen that does not normally trigger me when changing the video source. this would be explained by a difference in graphic driver. Thank you for putting a name to this!

        12 days later

        To report back, I got the desktop (Dell XPS 8910) with a nVidia GeForce GT 730 graphics card and an integrated intel graphics card, and the BQ2760HS monitor (the box says BQ2760S, but on the back of the monitor it says BQ2760HS). Have been using it for a few days with the intel card disabled. I try to limit myself to this screen exposure only during the test period. The monitor is very bright, I have to reduce the brightness and contrast all to zero and still wear a sun glass clip-on. In terms of symptoms, it is definitely better than the Dell ST2310 I was using. We will see how it progresses. Meanwhile, I am also trying to set up a linux system to see if it can be better.

          ensete In general, when you plug in one device and it hurts your eyes on an otherwise ok display, it is almost assuredly because of Temporal Dithering. Unknown graphics driver issues are rare but DO exist, as in:

          • When IOS7 was introduced, it was much harder to look at on identical devices than IOS6 was. For no apparent reason. PWM was still not observable. It's difficult to rule out temporal dithering in this case, but I didn't see any under a normal magnifying glass.

          • Windows 8 introduced software compositing for the output, except when in Direct3D gaming modes. It led to a lot of people not liking Windows 8 much. I could tolerate it on the right hardware.

          • Windows 10 Anniversary Edition (2016) has made a big change to the software compositing resulting in INSTANT eyestrain for a number of people including myself. I use Windows 10 8 hours a day on this machine with a Quadro K420 and never have problems... I upgrade to AE and it immediately hurt. Same drivers (nVidia's latest Quadro drivers), same monitors. Rolled it back immediately and it was fine to look at again.

          Also, detecting PWM can be pretty simple, the "wave your finger up and down in front of it and see if it blurs or leaves ghosts" test is relatively accurate in my experience although ineffective at detecting high-frequency PWM.

            Jerry I can't find this model. Do you mean the GW2760HS?

              Gurm Do you run Windows 7 on any of your computers? I was thinking of dual-booting it with my WIndows 10 AE machine (which is a pain with UEFI, but anyway) to see if it makes a difference. Despite my prior statement that the AE made no difference I want to compare directly.

              Are all of the updates safe to install? I read, here I think, that some of the newer ones may have made changes that are detrimental to some of us.

              If it's the case that the newer updates ruin Windows 7 I will run un-updated SP1 without an internet connection and just compare it from there.

              I haven't seen any patches to Windows 7 cause issues, I haven't checked for updates on my primary laptop in a while though. I'll run it through its patch cycle and get back to you.

              • KM replied to this.
              • degen likes this.

                degen Yes, it is BenQ GW2760HS. Sorry for the typo.

                I ordered this from Costco today (for the 90 return policy), so we can both report on this monitor soon.

                Gurm I believe at the end of 2016 they made all further Windows 7 updates cumulative. Which means there is no way to isolate future problematic updates since they're all gonna be included in every monthly rollup. I might be wrong but it looks like this is true. Because on my fresh Windows 7 SP1 installation I don't see the November rollup anymore. Only the December one, its ~150 MB in size...

                • Gurm replied to this.
                  5 days later

                  KM I will make a system restore point wherever I was, and test that way.

                  I have reams of documentation around my eye strain issue, so happy to share to this thread over time. To date I have not found any explanation for display eye strain that fits all of my observed outcomes. While incredibly frustrating, it is worth adding

                  For example, smartphones and credit card terminal screens are notorious for causing me severe, immediate eye strain. However, some screen protectors 100% eliminate this issue. To date I have identified 2 types (Skinomi and TechArmor matte anti glare) that work. There have been other models but silly me forgot to keep track. There are several models that do not help at all.

                  So seeing as how there is a screen that does cure the eye strain, that would point to something being emitted from the display that the screen protector is blocking. This does not fit in with the temporal dithering, PWM, or other internal graphics properties hypothesis of cause.

                  I have also used various blue blocking lenses and never had any success with them.

                    ensete I'm going to give those matte screen protectors a try, although for me there can be a HUGE difference between revisions of operating systems on a given device. My HTC One m8 is flawless for me under Lollipop. The instant I put Marshmallow on it, and reboot, it becomes instantly and harshly painful. The same can be said for PC's. Regardless of the hardware involved, updating Windows 10 to the Anniversary Edition (August 2016 build) renders it unusable.

                      Gurm Same thing here, I had a Moto G on Lollipop, no issues, the Marshmellow update came down, and I got severe eye strain. Something in the OS altered the way the video hardware is driving the screen. I have not moved any of my PC's off Windows 7 so I cant speak to 10

                      Just another FYI, I would suggest trying those specific brands (TechArmor or Skinomi). I keep a running list and most screen protectors do not help at all. I have emailed both companies trying to determine what makes their protectors different, or find out what exactly they filter out, but cannot get an answer from them.

                      ensete, can you provide the exact (maybe an Amazon link) model of the screen protectors that work? I want to upgrade my smartphone and frankly a $10 solution is well worth it.

                      Did these screen protectors help with your Moto after you upgraded to Marshmallow?

                        dev