研究目的
Investigating the effects of quantum dot (QD) display and liquid crystal display (LCD) on human visual function and visual fatigue accumulation.
研究成果
The study concludes that QD display and LCD affect the physiological parameters of the human eye during continuous visual tasks, with QD display having a significantly smaller effect than LCD. QD display performs better in visual health comfort, providing a theoretical basis and data support for the development of quantum dot display technology.
研究不足
The study's limitations include the potential influence of participants' subjective factors on the results, such as emotion and subjective cognition, despite the use of objective physiological parameters.
1:Experimental Design and Method Selection:
Conducted a human factor experiment comparing QD display and LCD effects on human visual function using ACC, HOAs, and MTF as objective physiological indicators.
2:Sample Selection and Data Sources:
39 healthy participants performed a 45-minute video viewing task. Physiological parameters were measured before and after the task.
3:List of Experimental Equipment and Materials:
Used QD (NJ-Q-01) and LCD (NJ-N-01) displays, Luminance Meter, NIDEK AR-310 optometry instrument, NIDEK OPD Scan III instrument.
4:Experimental Procedures and Operational Workflow:
Participants had a closed eye rest for 15 minutes before the eye physiological parameters were collected, performed a 45-minute animated video viewing task and color ball discrimination test, then had their eye physiological parameters collected again.
5:Data Analysis Methods:
Analyzed changes in ACC, MTF, HOA4, HOA12, HOA Coma, and HOA Clover as indicators of visual fatigue.
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