Posted by Unknown / Saturday, June 25, 2016 / No comments / tech
Using A Smartphone In Bed Can Render You Blind Momentarily
A 22-year-old English lady raised the complaint and
became quite concerned which started a study into this peculiar behavior of the
eyes.
But, Omar
Mahroo, her ophthalmologist from the Moorfields
Eye Hospital in London had a different theory and it turned out to be accurate.
They are calling it the transient smartphone blindness and don’t worry, it is
not a disease at all. We all experience it in one way or another every other
day but not prominently since both of our optic nerves or retinas are doing it.
It only becomes scary when only one eye is doing it.
So basically, the one eye part occurs because people are
in a bad habit of gazing at their smartphones before going to sleep, and their
stance is such that one eye is often covered in a pillow, and only the other
eye is viewing the phone. Just like when you enter your home after exposure to
bright sunlight, and yet it becomes difficult for you to see anything for
several minutes, the same thing happens here but with one eye. But since the
vision is mightily distorted with one eye showing full vision and the other one
struggling, it causes panic and alarm for the people experiencing it. I too
have experienced it many times.
The eye’s retina is an amazing organ since it can adapt
to different qualities and intensities of light. It can reduce sensitivity
while outside during the day and increase it in darker areas but it always
takes some time to adjust along with the pupils and the cornea. So basically
the light alters the pigment color of the retina cells for some time and it may
take up to forty minutes for them to come back to their original color that can
help us see in the dark room.
To test this hypothesis, Omar and his colleagues used a bright
smartphone in a dimly lit room where everything was only barely visible. When
they stopped using it, they experienced the similar blind vision for several
minutes before the retina eventually adapted, thus confirming the earlier statement.
“The retina is like a minibrain in our eye, and we’re
still trying to understand what goes on there,” says Omar as the retinal
studies are still unsure of how image is
actually transmitted to the brain back and forth. So, we won’t advise you to not
to use a smartphone in a dark room as it has no known side effects but if you
want to let’s say find keys after using your phone, you might need to turn on
the lamp next time!
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