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Eye strain from LED backlighting in MacBook Pro

There is one relatively serious con of the new LED backlit displays in the new MacBook Pros that seems to not get too much mention in the media. About a month ago I bought a new MacBook Pro to replace my standard white MacBook. One feature of the MacBook Pro that I was unaware of was the introduction of the LED backlit display to replace the CCFL backlight.

Once I started using my new laptop for long periods of time, I noticed severe eye strain and minor symptoms almost similar to motion sickness. After 20 or 30 minutes of use, I felt like I had been looking at the screen all day. Much longer and I would get headaches. If I used the old white MacBook (with its CCFL display), I had no eye troubles at all. Moreover, I could detect a distinct flicker on the MacBook Pro display when I moved my eyes across it - especially over high contract areas of the screen. White text on a black background was virtually impossible for me to read without feeling sick to my stomach because of all the flickering from moving my eyes over the text.

The strangest thing about all of this was that nobody else I showed the screen to could see these flickers I was seeing. I began to question my sanity until I did a little research. Discovering that the MacBook Pro introduced a new LED backlit display started to shed some light (so to speak) on what might be going on. I had long known that I could see LED flicker in things like car taillights and christmas lights that most of my friends could not see. I also knew that I could easily see the "rainbow effect" in DLP televisions that many other people don't see.

My research into LED technology turned up the fact that it is a bit of a technological challenge to dim an LED. Varying the voltage generally doesn't work as they are essentially designed to be either on or off with a fixed brightness. To work around this limitation, designers use a technique called pulse width modulation to mimic the appearance of lower intensity light coming out of the LED. I don't claim to fully understand the concept, but it essentially seems to involve very briefly turning off the LED several times over a given time span. The dimmer the LED needs to appear, the more time it spends in the off state.

Because this all happens so very quickly, the human brain does not interpret the flickers as flickers, rather as simply dimmer light. For most people that is. Some people (myself included) are much more sensitive to these flickers. From what I can tell, the concept is called the "flicker fusion threshold" and is the frequency at which sometime that is actually flickering is interpreted by the human brain as being continuously lit. While the vast majority of people have a threshold that doesn't allow them to see the flicker in dimmed LEDs, some people have a higher threshold that causes them to see the flickering in things like LED car tail lights and, unfortunately, LED backlit displays - leading to this terrible eye strain.

The solution? I now keep my screen turned up to full brightness to eliminate the need for the flicker-inducing pulse width modulation. The screen is very bright, but there are no more flickers and I love my MacBook Pro too much to exchange it for a plain MacBook with CCFL backlighting (which will also supposedly be switching to LED backlighting in 2009 anyway.) The staff at my local Apple store was of course more than helpful and was willing to let me exchange my glossy screen for matte even though I was beyond the 14 day return period. I knew that wasn't the problem though as my old MacBook was a glossy display. I've decided to stick with my full brightness solution. Sitting in a brightly-lit room tends to help alleviate how blinding the full brightness of the screen can be. In a dimly-lit room I guess I just wear sunglasses. Either way, the extreme brightness is worlds better than the sickening flicker I saw with a lower brightness setting

I would caution anybody considering buying a product with an LED backlit display to pay careful attention to make sure you don't have this same sensitivity. Turn the screen brightness down, find a high contract area of the screen, and quickly move your eyes back and forth over the screen. If you can detect the flicker, you may end up with this same problem.

I have no idea what percentage of the population has this sensitivity. I imagine we will hear more about it as more and more displays start using this technology. Hopefully the Apple engineers will come up with a way to eliminate this flicker some of us can see.

Russ Martin

15-inch MacBook Pro, Mac OS X (10.5.4)

Posted on Aug 23, 2008 8:25 AM

Reply
2,489 replies

Oct 18, 2011 9:16 PM in response to MrVas

I'd just like to let everyone in this discussion know that I found a sutiable solution that still involves LED monitors. I decided to buy another laptop brand (thinkpad) that has a LED display, but has a matte (anti-glare) finish.


No eyestrain.


Maybe they use different LED's, or maybe the anti-glare is the difference. Either way it is fine for my eyes.

Nov 2, 2011 6:56 AM in response to maygirl

I've knocked together an app in an attempt to reduce my own eye strain problems with the MBA 13" screen. It overlays a semi-transparent black mask so that the LCD panel is never quite fully transparent, i.e. the LED backlight is never fully exposed to your eyes.


I'm not sure it works all that well -- looking at the screen feels a lot more comfortable, but my eyes still got too bad to continue working for a while earlier today. FWIW, here it is anyway:


http://max.tc/SunVisor.zip

Nov 8, 2011 2:43 PM in response to razureus

Yes, my 13" MBP is much better since I calibrated it using settings posted earlier in this thread and the addition of a Power Support anti-glare film. I also make a point of not staring at the display for any longer than necessary, particularly large, bright open windows. When ever possible I change the window background color to something other than white.


Like MrVas, I have found that carefully adjusting the backlight according to the ambient lighting makes a significant difference. I keep the Shades icon in the Finder menu Bar for making adjustments.


I doubt that I would be able to adjust to the MacBook Air display. It caused severe eyestrain, much worse than my MBP.

Nov 8, 2011 4:01 PM in response to eww

Hyperbole aside, many people use LED backlit displays without complaint. But at the same time there are more than a few people who are sensitive to the LED backlighting and from what I have read, it is isn't necessarily a sensitivity to all LEDs, just certain displays. Early Apple displays didn't cause me a problem; the current portable Macs do. Go figure... Apple knows what changed but it ain't talking!


As far as your question Razureus, if you are approaching the end of your return period and you still are not able to use the MBA without problems, you should seriously comsider returning it and letting Apple know why. If you decide to keep the Mac even though your eyes are still bothered by the display, you risk getting stuck with a computer that will be torture to use. There is no guarantee that you will become less sensitive to the LED even if other people have been able to do so.


Sorry, I don't have a better suggestion for you...

Nov 14, 2011 7:25 AM in response to RMartin111

FWIW, I simply cant get comfortable infront of ANY LED-backlit screens, TVs, laptops, ipads, whatever.

What starts as eye strain becomes dizziness and confusion after a time, even though they are perfectly large and defined enough.

I've worked with computers for 20 years and never had such problems, even with old CRTs. (im 35 now)

I hope they sort this out as the technology matures, I certainly wont be buying any new Apple products until they do.

I don't care what anyone else says as regards the technology, these LED screens aren't doing my health any good at all.

Nov 14, 2011 10:50 AM in response to dan98

Dan, there are still CCFL displays available from other companies. NEC makes a number of high-quality CCFL-backlit displays. You can use the displays with the Mac Mini and other Macs that work with an external monitor.


Here is one that I am considering pairing with my 13" MBP. The actual price is $635 when the display is added to the cart: http://www.bhphotovideo.com/c/product/629071-REG/NEC_LCD2490WUXI2_BK_MultiSync_2 490WUXi2_BK_24_Widescreen.html#pr-header-629071.


There are less expensive displays too.

Eye strain from LED backlighting in MacBook Pro

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