Tks for the professional explanation. Honestly I always had the same behaviour but I thought it was more related with my age, not being a digital native but an "adapted digital".
Echoing what Stefan wrote, how does an e-ink reader like an Amazon Kindle fit into this study? All of the benefits of a digital library without the blue light downsides?
As somebody who reads a lot of text on a daily basis on a laptop as well as a desktop display: Is there a technical fix for "the smartphone (screen) problem", i.e., a monitor offering at least the same (or maybe even better) reading "ergonomics" vs. a paper printout?
Seems worth assessing + maybe there is research available here, too?!
Tks for the professional explanation. Honestly I always had the same behaviour but I thought it was more related with my age, not being a digital native but an "adapted digital".
Now I know why I do so. Tks
What about an e-reader then? I still use an old one with no backlighting.
Echoing what Stefan wrote, how does an e-ink reader like an Amazon Kindle fit into this study? All of the benefits of a digital library without the blue light downsides?
Do you know when you know something but don't know how to explain it?
This explains that for me. Thanks for every article you write.
I read this on a screen and sighed when I got to the number '34.'
Thx. Very interesting.
As somebody who reads a lot of text on a daily basis on a laptop as well as a desktop display: Is there a technical fix for "the smartphone (screen) problem", i.e., a monitor offering at least the same (or maybe even better) reading "ergonomics" vs. a paper printout?
Seems worth assessing + maybe there is research available here, too?!