Video Games to Help Kids’ Eyes?

Demon_Skeith

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When I was a small child my parents would warn me that spending all day in front of the television playing video games would ruin my eyesight. Today researchers at the University of Tennessee Space Institute in Tullahoma have integrated computer games into a device that could be instrumental in saving a child's eyesight.

When did you have your first eye exam? Age eight? Age nine? Age thirteen? Statistics say that 80 percent of children in the U.S. don't get their vision tested until at least kindergarten, and by then it's often too late to catch the early signs of eye-manifesting medical problems. More than just a test for bad vision, a properly administered eye exam can detect the early signs of learning disabilities like dyslexia or neurological disorders such as autism.

According to Ying-Ling Ann Chen research assistant professor in physics at the University of Tennessee, most children don't go to the eye doctor unless their eyes actively hurt. Children don't know what they should be seeing, so they don't know when something has gone awry. To make matters worse, many children's vision exams are delivered improperly.

"Vision screening is important at an early age to detect several different causes of vision disorders," said Chen. "The few children that do get screened today aren't being screened adequately. For instance, many current screening methods do one eye at a time and studies show young eyes will accommodate significantly, and this causes inaccurate results."

Ying-Ling Ann Chen wants to change the way we handle vision care for children, so she's invented a new device that5 utilizes cartoons and interactive computer games to keep children occupied while diagnostic devices do their stuff.
Called the Dynamic Ocular Evaluation System (DOES), the machine Chen and her team have created offers doctors and patients a simple, inexpensive solution to a complicated problem. The child simply sits in front of the machine and either watches a three-minute cartoon or plays a computer game. The DOES does all of the work.

At the beginning of the cartoon, a three-second comprehensive test screens for binocular refractive risks, high-order aberration, scattering, ocular alignment, and significant neural problems. The subsequent dynamic test searches for less significant signs of abnormal ocular alignment, neural responses, amblyopia, and-in the future-mental statuses that include dyslexia, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, post-traumatic stress disorder, and autism. The images and results are digitally recorded and can be electronically transmitted to specialists for referral if necessary.

In short, it gives children something to stare at while we scan them for defects. It's a simple and elegant solution to a rather large national problem.

Chen and team are currently testing the DOES out at the Tullahoma Walmart Vision Center, which I guess is the world's leading Walmart for on-site scientific testing or something. They've got the funding, they have the attention of the vision care industry, so it's only a matter of time before our children start begging us to take them to the eye doctor on a weekly basis.

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I blame video games for the reason I wear glasses, which is a good thing as the glasses have protected my eyes from some bad stuff from happening.
 
I am not really sure about this research. I recently went for my first eye test at age 19 and I ended up walking away with glasses for watching screens and driving. While it doesn't bother me that much I really must say that glaring screens must contribute somewhat to damage to the eyes if exposed for long periods of time. While they may not be the cause every time, being frequently exposed to a screen especially in bad lighting can be detrimental for vision in the long run. Luckily Scientists will soon crack a kind of eyewear or implant that will take our vision above and beyond what it is, eliminating the need for 100% natural eyes.
 
I have read somewhere online that if you want to improve or atleast stop your eyesight from being weak then you should after every 1 or 2 hours, look away from the computer screen to other objects which are almost 10 feet away from you.
 
Yeah, every instruction manual under the sun comes with that little advisory in the front. I always ignored it. Jokes on me I guess if it weren't for the fact that my glasses make me look freakin sexy...
 
I read instruction manuals which say you should only game for 30 minutes to 1 hour at a time to avoid eye strain.
 
Yeah, as I said I have read these manuals and have paid the price for ignoring them, but as I said glasses make me look awesome so it's all cool :P
 
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