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Effect of Watching 3-Dimensional Television on Refractive Error in ChildrenEffect of Watching 3-Dimensional Television on Refractive Error in Children

Other Titles
Effect of Watching 3-Dimensional Television on Refractive Error in Children
Authors
김승현서영우최영민한지윤남기태유은주Yoonae A. Cho
Issue Date
2015
Publisher
대한안과학회
Keywords
Depth perception; Myopia; Refractive errors
Citation
Korean Journal of Ophthalmology, v.29, no.1, pp.53 - 57
Indexed
SCOPUS
KCI
Journal Title
Korean Journal of Ophthalmology
Volume
29
Number
1
Start Page
53
End Page
57
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/95054
ISSN
1011-8942
Abstract
Purpose: To investigate the effect of watching 3-dimensional (3D) television (TV) on refractive error in children. Methods: Sixty healthy volunteers, aged 6 to 12 years, without any ocular abnormalities other than refractive error were recruited for this study. They watched 3D TV for 50 minutes at a viewing distance of 2.8 meters. The image disparity of the 3D contents was from -1 to 1 degree. Refractive errors were measured both before and immediately after watching TV and were rechecked after a 10-minute rest period. The refractive errors before and after watching TV were compared. The amount of refractive change was also compared between myopes and controls. The refractive error of the participants who showed a myopic shift immediately after watching TV were compared across each time point to assure that the myopic shift persisted after a 10-minute rest. Results: The mean age of the participants was 9.23 ± 1.75 years. The baseline manifest refractive error was ‑1.70 ± 1.79 (-5.50 to +1.25) diopters. The refractive errors immediately after watching and after a 10-minute rest were ‑1.75 ± 1.85 and ‑1.69 ± 1.80 diopters, respectively, which were not different from the baseline values. Myopic participants (34 participants), whose spherical equivalent was worse than ‑0.75 diopters, also did not show any significant refractive change after watching 3D TV. A myopic shift was observed in 31 participants with a mean score of 0.29 ± 0.23 diopters, which resolved after a 10-minute rest. Conclusions: Watching properly made 3D content on a 3D TV for 50 minutes with a 10-minute intermission at more than 2.8 meters of viewing distance did not affect the refractive error of children.
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