3D- facts and fiction
First, I'm an optometrist.
There were several mis-representations in this article and they never really did devulge the actual study that they deemed "hazardous" to the eyes.
Strabisumus and "lazy eye" are two different conditions. Lazy eye is also known as "amblyopia"- an inability to see 20/20 out of the eye. It only happens in one eye (not two, like waffletower stated)- bilateral amblyopia is extremely rare. I've seen one case in my 35 years of practice.
Yes, viewing a 3-D image can be "tiring" and stressful for some, depending on their binocular viewing abilities. The worst I've heard about (from Avatar) is some nausea and headaches- nothing that we couldn't survive by stopping the action. OH, and "eye muscle exercises", when done appropriately does NOT induce strabismus. In fact, those "exercises" aren't really for eye muscle strength, they are for eye coordination, which takes place in the brain, not the muscle.
Normally, we see in 3D all the time! However, viewing an artifical 3D image "every day all day" as they imply in the article is ridiculous; and if someone was going to do that, they deserve what they get- an eyeful of hurt!
More than likely the companies offered those cautions as a preventive measure against any potential lawsuits. ANYONE with an eye problem can pretend that it was caused by viewing their system. Remember, the lawyers have to deal with this issue before the program goes public!
Jeffrey Anshel, OD, FAAO