Abstract

Viewing electronic screens for a long time can cause visual fatigue, even induce eye problems such as refractive errors, dry eyes, etc. The relationship between screen display and visual fatigue has received much attention. This article aims to study the optimal display color temperature and color mode under two common ambient illuminations—normal office lighting (450 lux) and dark environment (3 lux). In a 2 × 2×3 experimental design, 36 participants evaluated the effects of two display color modes (light mode and dark mode) and three screen color temperatures (2800 K, 4500 K, and 6500 K) on visual fatigue under two ambient illuminations. We used eye movement tracking technology to collect blink rate and pupil diameters as objective indicators and used the Richter scale to collect subjective visual fatigue and preference score as subjective indicators. Results showed that at 450 lux, lower visual fatigue was found in the dark mode, 4500 K and 6500 K. At 3 lux, the visual fatigue was lower in the dark mode and 4500 K color temperature. Whether at daytime or night, the 2800 K color temperature resulted in the highest visual fatigue. Our findings complement the research on screen display and visual fatigue. They have practical implications for reducing visual fatigue caused by prolonged viewing of electronic screens.

Full Text
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