Find out whether reading online is making you sick​

Aarp

Find out whether reading online is making you sick​"


Play all audios:

Loading...

Who knew that too much screen time could lead to illness? Well, maybe your mother when she admonished you about sitting too close to the TV, but that’s a different matter. The modern


condition is known as cybersickness. The cause is scrolling for long stretches of time, and symptoms include dizziness, headaches, nausea and vertigo. It differs from motion sickness because


the sufferer is stationary but experiences a sense of motion through changing visual imagery. “Symptoms can last for days and become disabling in the most severe cases,” says Clifton L.


Gooch, M.D., a professor and the chair of neurology at the University of South Florida. This condition is triggered in some people because the eyes are registering motion while the body


remains stable, confusing the brain. CYBERSICKNESS IS RELATED TO MOTION SICKNESS Motion sickness happens when your brain gets conflicting information from your eyes, inner ears, joints and


muscles and doesn’t know whether you’re moving. Cybersickness can happen from just scrolling through web pages, although it tends to become even more intense when people use virtual reality


headsets, Gooch says. “Symptoms can last for days and become disabling in the most severe cases.” — Clifton L. Gooch, M.D., University of South Florida Researchers have long thought that


older adults are more likely to experience cybersickness because of past studies using virtual reality driving simulators. But a 2021 study from Florida State University found that a sample


of 20 Tallahassee-area adults age 65 and older reported fewer symptoms when using virtual reality headsets in a variety of tasks, including video gaming, compared to the same number of


adults whose median age was just shy of 20. Although the researchers say greater numbers of people need to be tested, they consider virtual reality a promising technology that can help older


adults improve their mental health, physical health and stress levels. The biggest barrier to its use is more likely to be comfort with computers and other devices. HOW TO KEEP THE SYMPTOMS


AT BAY Cybersickness sufferers needn’t disengage entirely from the internet. Gooch recommends taking breaks from computers and phone screens and also using “migraine glasses,” which block


blue-light frequencies. They’re a slightly different type of eyewear than computer glasses meant to filter out blue light. While using a computer, make it a habit to use the page down key to


scroll less frequently. Browsers to eliminate the scrolling motion are also available. For example, the free Jump browser for Apple iPhones enables you to jump down a page. It was created


by Javier Colayco, a former web developer who was looking for a remedy after he and his wife experienced “some vertigo and eyestrain from scrolling on a typical browser.”


Trending News

The latest games to discover and play

Memorial Day Sale! Join AARP for just $11 per year with a 5-year membership Join now and get a FREE gift. Expires 6/4  G...

Stop rats in your garden in may by not leaving one common item outside at night

RATS CAN BE A HUGE PROBLEM IN GARDENS AND CAN EVEN GET INTO HOMES IF THEY ARE ALLOWED TO BREED UNCONTROLLABLY KATHERINE ...

About va form 10-3542 | veterans affairs

* Form name: Veteran/Beneficiary Claim for Reimbursement of Travel Expenses Form revision date: November 2024 Related to...

Why are so few older adults getting the rsv vaccine?

“All adults over the age of 60 should really be talking to their provider about whether they should get the vaccine,” Ma...

James mcavoy: five best moments

It was a surprisingly meteoric rise for James McAvoy, who seemed to go from foppish love interest to action hero to supe...

Latests News

Find out whether reading online is making you sick​

Who knew that too much screen time could lead to illness? Well, maybe your mother when she admonished you about sitting ...

The new brain drain: why are the young leaving britain? | thearticle

Professor Mona Siddiqui, Professor of Islamic and Interreligious Studies at the University of Edinburgh, is one of my fa...

Nightmarish nine-day traffic jam: in china, cars crawl along 60-mile stretch

On a road trip once, two friends and I spent several hours in a traffic jam, baking under the summer sun. It was miserab...

Waccos find their places in the sun

The writer is a Chicago native. To understand the mentality of a Chicagoan in Southern California, remember that the adv...

6 diy home maintenance tasks for fall​

Memorial Day Sale! Join AARP for just $11 per year with a 5-year membership Join now and get a FREE gift. Expires 6/4  G...

Top