The biology behind blue light filtering is real, but the consumer benefits promised are not yet backed by strong clinical evidence.
Marketers promote blue light glasses benefits such as reduced eye strain, and better sleep but research has not confirmed most of those claims.
People nowadays are exposed to blue light constantly through cellphones, laptops, and tablets, and thus it has become critical to understand whether and how the high-dosages of blue-light exposure ...
Prolonged exposure to blue light from digital screens can cause eye fatigue—and worse, disrupt natural sleeping patterns. This is where special-coated blue light-blocking glasses can help. As remote ...
Blue light protection technology is becoming popular for protection from light emitted by computer, smartphone, and tablet screens, as well as televisions and even energy-efficient LED lights. While ...
Blue-light filtering lenses (BFLs) are marketed to protect the eyes from blue light that may be hazardous to the visual system. Because BFLs attenuate light, they reduce object contrast, which may ...
Current relationship status: in a domestic partnership with my iPad, laptop, and iPhone. After shifting all areas of my life to digital (virtual happy hours, endless IGTV workouts), my screen time has ...
Blue light is a high-energy part of visible light from the sun, screens, and light-emitting diode (LED) bulbs. Your cornea and lens don’t block blue light the way they block ultraviolet (UV) rays.
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