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Audio and Video Talk
Audio Visual Technology
3D
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<blockquote data-quote="u235" data-source="post: 72792" data-attributes="member: 1485"><p>3D is bad for them physically. Up to the age of about 11, your eyes learn to adjust focus and alignment in step with each other, so that you see a single image (collimated) and a focused one. It becomes hard-wired in your brain. When you watch 3d, the eye does not adjust its focus and alignment in step, and it really badly affects the hard-wired ability to learn this. THe remedial eye exercises that many kids do as part of OT are designed to correct a lack of this ability. The main symptom is an inability to read - the eye can't track the lines on a page and stay focused at the same time. Beyond 11 it's not correctable.</p><p></p><p>So anyone with kids under 12 - PLEASE stay away from 3D television. The odd 3D movie won't hurt them. (Source: New Scientist)</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="u235, post: 72792, member: 1485"] 3D is bad for them physically. Up to the age of about 11, your eyes learn to adjust focus and alignment in step with each other, so that you see a single image (collimated) and a focused one. It becomes hard-wired in your brain. When you watch 3d, the eye does not adjust its focus and alignment in step, and it really badly affects the hard-wired ability to learn this. THe remedial eye exercises that many kids do as part of OT are designed to correct a lack of this ability. The main symptom is an inability to read - the eye can't track the lines on a page and stay focused at the same time. Beyond 11 it's not correctable. So anyone with kids under 12 - PLEASE stay away from 3D television. The odd 3D movie won't hurt them. (Source: New Scientist) [/QUOTE]
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Audio and Video Talk
Audio Visual Technology
3D
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