Smartphones should really be used for looking up information quickly at a glance. When you need to do something for longer periods of time, you should use different devices. To prevent nearsightedness/myopia, you can use AR glasses, VR headsets, projectors, TVs, etc. instead of using monitors or reading physical books. The aforementioned devices keep your eyes relaxed (accommodation-wise) over long periods of time.
Seems like the researchers are not interested in telling you that, however.
Children spend most of their time indoor—would you want something to happen to them outdoor? Surely not, right?! But surely it must be those pesky screens.
If that's not clickbait, then that's a hugely sensationalist title to something that is at best ignorant and at worst misinformation; I don't usually flag posts but I'm flagging this one.
3 comments
[ 4.5 ms ] story [ 16.1 ms ] threadSeems like the researchers are not interested in telling you that, however.
Children spend most of their time indoor—would you want something to happen to them outdoor? Surely not, right?! But surely it must be those pesky screens.
If that's not clickbait, then that's a hugely sensationalist title to something that is at best ignorant and at worst misinformation; I don't usually flag posts but I'm flagging this one.
[1]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Myopia#Environmental_factors