ocean10 yeah it's interesting - I also have tinnitus and it turns out THAT is related to my bad posture also. Lots of increased pressure and inflammation in the skull due to bad posture contributes to a variety of issues. It's all inter-related. TMJ, Tinnitus, Sleep Apnea, even intra-ocular pressure are all controlled by the same nerve cluster!
Have you ever met another person with our issue? Or a doctor with experience?
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I found out my coworker gets really bad headaches unless he uses dark mode on his OS and applications. Seems to work for him. I wish mine were that simple. Dark mode alone doesn't seem to help me that much.
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Relatives with one experiencing issues with an Apple TV display recently. This relative never had issues with computer displays before in the multi-decades of experience working long hours as software programmer.
Maybe not entirely what you're looking for, but I'm aware of some doctors (optopmologists/neurologists) who have articulated (some) of this issue may relate to the phenomenon of photosensitive epilepsy.
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Is that published somewhere that you have seen? I sort of feel like doctors don’t know which direction to go when they hear about this (ie migraines, epilepsy, vestibular issues etc.). Would love to start collecting material to share with doctors since even this issue in general has been completely unfamiliar to every doctor I’ve spoken with. NONE of the doctors I’ve seen have even a passing knowledge of display technology (not that they should be expected to I guess) so it makes it even more difficult.
I’d need to get up to speed on how to use an oscilloscope+photodiode and microscope to do that.
But sounds like you are talking about a different population of people than where I (and sounds like some others here) fit in. For me I’m not be able to use a “bad” screen no matter how badly I wanted to. I get symptoms pretty much immediately symptoms and they are strong enough that suffering through them isn’t possible.
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ocean10 Is that published somewhere that you have seen? I sort of feel like doctors don’t know which direction to go when they hear about this (ie migraines, epilepsy, vestibular issues etc.).
I'm mostly referring to informal conversations I've had with neurologists and other eye doctors in the past ~10 years. Although I believe there has been more scientific research regarding "flicker sensitivity" as of recent.
ocean10 Here is a fairly recent research article on triggers for photosensitive epilepsy, and it mentions PWM integrated with modern displays and the issue of eyestrain