Cybersickness, computer vision syndrome, sopite syndrome and electrosensitivity

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Cybersickness, computer vision syndrome, sopite syndrome and electrosensitivity

rowster_c

Cybersickness, simulator sickness, computer vision
syndrome, sopite syndrome and electrosensitivity.

I am writing to the group concerning some
information that I feel is particularly pertinent
to electrosensitivity. This information should be
much more well known, however it is not at all
publicised. I will leave out some bits, I only
found it 2 weeks ago. It appears that 'terminal
illness' or 'video operator distress', seen in
electrosensitives, may well be a particularly
strong form of chronic motion sickness known as
`sopite syndrome'. A possible treatment, 'Prio
(tm)' glasses, is suggested, as well as a
requirement for much higher resolution monitors
that are radiation free.

There appears to be a clear link between a variety of
conditions associated with various man made occurences.
The conditions have a variety of names:

cybersickness (in wearers of virtual reality (VR) goggles
and gear, lcd right in front of eyeballs), cyberadaptaion
syndrome, simulator sickness (in military flight
simulators), illness in wearers of night vision goggles,
motion disorientation, motion adaptation syndrome.
seasickness, space sickness (astronauts), travel
sickness. In several of these the subject is not actually
moving.

All of the above conditions are forms of motion sickness.
Motion sickness occurs when there are mismatched signals
between your different sensors- eyes, gravity, vestibular
system (inner ear) etc. It is expressed more strongly in
computer flight sims and VR goggles due to other
disposing factors including missed frames (computer can't
keep up), screen flicker, how deeply the user becomes
immersed in the environment, and most important of all
screen PIXELATION, as described below.

Patients in VR get nausea (up to 30% of exposures),
eyestrain (up to 40% of exposures), drowsiness,
salivation, sweating, headache, and dizziness/vertigo, as
well as loss of postural stability (staggering around).
Vomiting is infrequent (< 1%) and when it occurs, it is
usually more than one hour after exposure. Long-term
aftereffects, including visual flashbacks and
disorientation can occur 12 hrs later. The problems are
the subject of multi million dollars of research and have
resulted in virtual reality goggles being quietly pulled
off the market, and much work being done by government
departments of concern to address it.

However importantly, apart from the acute condition of
motion sickness, a chronic less recognised, and really
more debilitating condition sometimes arises, called
SOPITE SYNDROME, from the latin sopor for sleep. In my
opinion the symptom list is a good match for a mild
version of chronic fatigue syndrome, subtracting the
flulike symptoms. It was found in astronauts, and then
realised that it occurred a century earlier, where it was
recognised as a rare, disastrous form of seasickness. The
original author was the NASA scientist Graybriel.

sopite syndrome, a form of motion sickness that
can arise with chronic exposure to relatively
unprovocative physical motion, such as the gentle
rocking of a boat. With frequent repeated or
chronic long-term exposure to mildly provocative
stimulation, a persistent form of motion sickness
can develop involving drowsiness, apathy, lack of
initiative, mood swings, headache, eyestrain, and
postural instability.

from the navy, ( http://www.nbdl.org/research01.html ) we
have:

Sopite Syndrome
The sopite syndrome is the manifestation of motion
sickness which, as the name indicates, is
characterized by drowsiness and mental depression.
Other symptoms include fatigue, difficulty in
concentrating, and DISTURBED SLEEP. Unlike many of
their predecessors in the field of motion sickness
research, Graybiel and Knepton in 1976 reported
that drowsiness is one of the cardinal symptoms of
motion sickness. They coined the term sopite
syndrome to indicate that these manifestations are
only part of an identifiable symptom-complex. As
long ago as 1912, Byrne stated that the effects of
seasickness on the nervous system create psychic
depression so extreme, and a disturbance of
cerebral function of such magnitude, that self-
control becomes impossible. Although this is a
somewhat extreme endpoint to these manifestations,
they can have profound effects on performance at
much lower levels.

In 1936, Hill reported that sleep had an important
bearing on seasickness, pointing out that
drowsiness, apathy and mental lethargy, without
actual somnolence, were present. In 1954, Schwab
noted that motion sickness includes a wide variety
of minor symptoms that escalate before actual
nausea and vomiting occur.
'

In summary, after the nausea and vomiting of acute motion
sickness go away, you are left with permanent drowsy
drunken apathy. Your body adapts to the motions only part
way, part of your nervous system (which part unknown)
can't fully adapt.

In my opinion, this appears to be a form of jet lag.
After you get off the plane, where you may have been
airsick, and before you acclimatise after a few days to
the local geomagnetic field and other factors, during
that period, you are jet lagged. Sopite syndrome appears
to be a form of jet lag that doesn't go away.

What has this got to do with electrosensitivity?

The last condition we must first consider is computer
vision syndrome (CVS). Anybody with electrosensitivity
can look a CVS and say 'gee I wish I had that on a good
day'. It appears to be minor in comparison to es.

There has been a great deal of research into CVS, and it
appears as if they may have struck gravy. This research
is backed by the American College of Optometrists.

It appears that the brain and eyes cannot handle computer
pixels. The brain can see those little spotties and it
sends you off. Specifically, the brain sees the spotties
as what is termed 'gaussian blur', and for whatever
reason, the eyes can't focus on them properly in the
standard way. Possibly the brain interprets the blur from
pixels as motion blur, like when something comes racing
in from the corner of your vision, and thinks the words
are moving. So the person keeps craning their head in
this direction and that to properly see the screen. The
eyes get confused, and switch from their normal focal
reading length, say 2 feet for example, to what is called
their DARK FOCUS position, say 4 feet, which is the
position that your eyes relax to in a dark room. Your
eyes and brain undergo a fundamental visual shift from
focal vision, to ambient vision, which is a more
peripheral vision, and they continually undergo a great
tug of war between these two values, leading to eyestrain
and computer vision syndrome.

So the worse the pixellation, and the worse the flicker,
the worse the focal shifts and the eyestrain.
Essentially, the human brain was not made to look at a
low resolution two dimensional low quality digital
computer monitor. Its visual system is far more sensitive
and advanced. See www.prio.com . Their description is not
that good and doesn't cover enough ground. I have no
financial association with this company at all.

You don't have these problems when reading a well printed
book, because their is no blur or pixelation on the page.

It was noted above that any inputs to the brain of
scrambled direction can produce motion sickness. It was
discussed in previous posts how radiation and magnetic
fields affect birds' magnetic compasses, and how
potentially if you were sleeping above an underground
stream, a suspected strong source of electromagnetic
anomalies you could develop similarly damaged sense of
direction. Birds flying around airport towers develop the
same motion disorientation seen in pilots and fly
straight into them, and the same scientists who did the
work above are trying to solve this in human pilots to
stop aircrashes.

Possibly someone with overly sensitized or damaged
direction sense (magnetosensitivity) could develop not
just computer vision syndrome, but a full on case of
motion sickness or sopite syndrome from their computer
monitor. I don't find this far fetched. Then add
radiation of various forms to that as an aggravator and
maybe you get something very similar to
electrosensitivity related computer monitor illness.

When I was younger I used to compulsively stand on my
head and swing on bars at gymnastics, while not being
particularly good at other bits of gym. This is now known
as a possible preexisting marker of vestibular damage,
which dramatically worsens motion sickness. Also I had
noticeable trouble with close visial work painting fine
details, another relevant issue.

Anybody with such a presumed case of 'sopite syndrome'
would certainly be affected by flickering fluorescent
lights, affecting the eyes.

What about mobile phones? 2 things. Firstly, mobile
phones produce 'digital audio', comparable to digital
video, and I have been told that some with related brain
issues are adversely affected by digital audio.
Additionally, you have an ELF magnetic field, and a
microwave E field, right next to your head.

It is only hypothetical that if electrosensitivity was a
form of motion sickness in people with damage to their
magnetosensitive systems, they may experience a
worsening of symptoms when their senses, primarily north/
south, are scrambled by EMFs.

Of course there would be other modes of action.

Various sources have suggested these visual/ brain
problems with too low resolution monitors to be a
possible and probable cause of COMPUTE ADDICTION,
internet addiction, and possibly even television and
poker machine addiction.

So how to fix a computer monitor. Prio has optometrists
provide prescription glasses to intentionally fool your
eyes/ brain into thinking the computer monitor is already
sitting out there at your dark focus length, in order to
stop the eyes flicking in and out. This is one solution,
but long term side effects could possibly occur. It would
be most interesting to see whether these glasses had any
effect on members of this group. There is a list of
practitioners at their website. I am not trying to sell
snake oil, only wondering.

I think a better solution is to invent an extremely high
resolution monitor (say 4000 x 3000 pixels instead of the
current 1024 x 768) and use excellent font antialiasing
to get rid of the jaggies on the screen. You can't just
slightly increase the resolution here, that would be a
waste of time. You have to go right off the deep end.
Such a projector system currently costs about $80,000 I
think. Your local computer salesman can't help. Then for
electrosensitives, somehow slash the emissions, a la
MultiQ. The military has now admitted that current
display technology is no where near good enough for their
human brain requirements (by a factor of 1000) for say
remote piloting.

It is possible that monitor symptoms with
electrosensitivity, and certain other medical conditions,
represent a failure of the visual system in those
aggravated by EMR. More evidence: it has been considered
by some that CFS patients display strong 'sensory
sensitivities' similar to autism, as a result of an
internal problem (endogenous carbon monoxide poisoning)
due to a major stress breakdown. Patients develop
sensitivities of vision (monitor, fluoros), hearing
(common hyperacusis), touch (sensory defensiveness),
smell (perfumes etc) and taste (food sensitivities?).
Regardless, many electrosensitives are sensitized to a
lot of things. As discussed in motion sickness, this
would definetly make you more sensitized to a computer
monitor, and send your sleep racing out the door.
Possibly if you had been sleeping for years over a
naturally occuring EMF source it could predispose you.

This is only one theory among many, however I do believe
that the very obvious subject of CYBERSICKNESS needs to
be raised as a subject with electrosensitivity.

Regards to all

Rowan Campbell

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Re: Cybersickness, computer vision syndrome, sopite syndrome and electrosensitivity

Andrew McAfee
Very interesting read. I think there may be similar contributing
factors between the motion sickness response from VDT's and a cell
phone's EMR. I don't thing my sensitivity was caused by my computer
screen since I don't have as much of a problem with the screens as I do
with cell phones, masts, wireless internet, etc.
There may be a link with the pineal gland, the metals in the pineal,
copper, cobalt, iron, etc. and motion sickness response.
The nerve damage isn't explained with the eye response theory nor is
the hypersensitivity to fields that can be felt with my ears, cheeks,
eyes, teeth, skin, etc.
The similar causative factors with the airplane pilots, VDT users and
ES sufferers is obvious to me.
Electromagnetic fields (microwave radiation, magnetic fields, etc.) and
toxic fumes and chemicals.
This can cause the damage we all all suffer from.
So I am not sold on the motion sickness/eye response angle but I'll
keep it in mind.
Andrew
On Feb 8, 2005, at 5:39 AM, rowsteroz wrote:

>
>
> Cybersickness, simulator sickness, computer vision
> syndrome, sopite syndrome and electrosensitivity.
>
> I am writing to the group concerning some
> information that I feel is particularly pertinent
> to electrosensitivity. This information should be
> much more well known, however it is not at all
> publicised. I will leave out some bits, I only
> found it 2 weeks ago. It appears that 'terminal
> illness' or 'video operator distress', seen in
> electrosensitives, may well be a particularly
> strong form of chronic motion sickness known as
> `sopite syndrome'. A possible treatment, 'Prio
> (tm)' glasses, is suggested, as well as a
> requirement for much higher resolution monitors
> that are radiation free.
>
> There appears to be a clear link between a variety of
> conditions associated with various man made occurences.
> The conditions have a variety of names:
>
> cybersickness (in wearers of virtual reality (VR) goggles
> and gear, lcd right in front of eyeballs), cyberadaptaion
> syndrome, simulator sickness (in military flight
> simulators), illness in wearers of night vision goggles,
> motion disorientation, motion adaptation syndrome.
> seasickness, space sickness (astronauts), travel
> sickness. In several of these the subject is not actually
> moving.
>
> All of the above conditions are forms of motion sickness.
> Motion sickness occurs when there are mismatched signals
> between your different sensors- eyes, gravity, vestibular
> system (inner ear) etc. It is expressed more strongly in
> computer flight sims and VR goggles due to other
> disposing factors including missed frames (computer can't
> keep up), screen flicker, how deeply the user becomes
> immersed in the environment, and most important of all
> screen PIXELATION, as described below.
>
> Patients in VR get nausea (up to 30% of exposures),
> eyestrain (up to 40% of exposures), drowsiness,
> salivation, sweating, headache, and dizziness/vertigo, as
> well as loss of postural stability (staggering around).
> Vomiting is infrequent (< 1%) and when it occurs, it is
> usually more than one hour after exposure. Long-term
> aftereffects, including visual flashbacks and
> disorientation can occur 12 hrs later. The problems are
> the subject of multi million dollars of research and have
> resulted in virtual reality goggles being quietly pulled
> off the market, and much work being done by government
> departments of concern to address it.
>
> However importantly, apart from the acute condition of
> motion sickness, a chronic less recognised, and really
> more debilitating condition sometimes arises, called
> SOPITE SYNDROME, from the latin sopor for sleep. In my
> opinion the symptom list is a good match for a mild
> version of chronic fatigue syndrome, subtracting the
> flulike symptoms. It was found in astronauts, and then
> realised that it occurred a century earlier, where it was
> recognised as a rare, disastrous form of seasickness. The
> original author was the NASA scientist Graybriel.
>
> sopite syndrome, a form of motion sickness that
> can arise with chronic exposure to relatively
> unprovocative physical motion, such as the gentle
> rocking of a boat. With frequent repeated or
> chronic long-term exposure to mildly provocative
> stimulation, a persistent form of motion sickness
> can develop involving drowsiness, apathy, lack of
> initiative, mood swings, headache, eyestrain, and
> postural instability.
>
> From the navy, ( http://www.nbdl.org/research01.html ) we
> have:
>
> Sopite Syndrome
> The sopite syndrome is the manifestation of motion
> sickness which, as the name indicates, is
> characterized by drowsiness and mental depression.
> Other symptoms include fatigue, difficulty in
> concentrating, and DISTURBED SLEEP. Unlike many of
> their predecessors in the field of motion sickness
> research, Graybiel and Knepton in 1976 reported
> that drowsiness is one of the cardinal symptoms of
> motion sickness. They coined the term sopite
> syndrome to indicate that these manifestations are
> only part of an identifiable symptom-complex. As
> long ago as 1912, Byrne stated that the effects of
> seasickness on the nervous system create psychic
> depression so extreme, and a disturbance of
> cerebral function of such magnitude, that self-
> control becomes impossible. Although this is a
> somewhat extreme endpoint to these manifestations,
> they can have profound effects on performance at
> much lower levels.
>
> In 1936, Hill reported that sleep had an important
> bearing on seasickness, pointing out that
> drowsiness, apathy and mental lethargy, without
> actual somnolence, were present. In 1954, Schwab
> noted that motion sickness includes a wide variety
> of minor symptoms that escalate before actual
> nausea and vomiting occur.
> '
>
> In summary, after the nausea and vomiting of acute motion
> sickness go away, you are left with permanent drowsy
> drunken apathy. Your body adapts to the motions only part
> way, part of your nervous system (which part unknown)
> can't fully adapt.
>
> In my opinion, this appears to be a form of jet lag.
> After you get off the plane, where you may have been
> airsick, and before you acclimatise after a few days to
> the local geomagnetic field and other factors, during
> that period, you are jet lagged. Sopite syndrome appears
> to be a form of jet lag that doesn't go away.
>
> What has this got to do with electrosensitivity?
>
> The last condition we must first consider is computer
> vision syndrome (CVS). Anybody with electrosensitivity
> can look a CVS and say 'gee I wish I had that on a good
> day'. It appears to be minor in comparison to es.
>
> There has been a great deal of research into CVS, and it
> appears as if they may have struck gravy. This research
> is backed by the American College of Optometrists.
>
> It appears that the brain and eyes cannot handle computer
> pixels. The brain can see those little spotties and it
> sends you off. Specifically, the brain sees the spotties
> as what is termed 'gaussian blur', and for whatever
> reason, the eyes can't focus on them properly in the
> standard way. Possibly the brain interprets the blur from
> pixels as motion blur, like when something comes racing
> in from the corner of your vision, and thinks the words
> are moving. So the person keeps craning their head in
> this direction and that to properly see the screen. The
> eyes get confused, and switch from their normal focal
> reading length, say 2 feet for example, to what is called
> their DARK FOCUS position, say 4 feet, which is the
> position that your eyes relax to in a dark room. Your
> eyes and brain undergo a fundamental visual shift from
> focal vision, to ambient vision, which is a more
> peripheral vision, and they continually undergo a great
> tug of war between these two values, leading to eyestrain
> and computer vision syndrome.
>
> So the worse the pixellation, and the worse the flicker,
> the worse the focal shifts and the eyestrain.
> Essentially, the human brain was not made to look at a
> low resolution two dimensional low quality digital
> computer monitor. Its visual system is far more sensitive
> and advanced. See www.prio.com . Their description is not
> that good and doesn't cover enough ground. I have no
> financial association with this company at all.
>
> You don't have these problems when reading a well printed
> book, because their is no blur or pixelation on the page.
>
> It was noted above that any inputs to the brain of
> scrambled direction can produce motion sickness. It was
> discussed in previous posts how radiation and magnetic
> fields affect birds' magnetic compasses, and how
> potentially if you were sleeping above an underground
> stream, a suspected strong source of electromagnetic
> anomalies you could develop similarly damaged sense of
> direction. Birds flying around airport towers develop the
> same motion disorientation seen in pilots and fly
> straight into them, and the same scientists who did the
> work above are trying to solve this in human pilots to
> stop aircrashes.
>
> Possibly someone with overly sensitized or damaged
> direction sense (magnetosensitivity) could develop not
> just computer vision syndrome, but a full on case of
> motion sickness or sopite syndrome from their computer
> monitor. I don't find this far fetched. Then add
> radiation of various forms to that as an aggravator and
> maybe you get something very similar to
> electrosensitivity related computer monitor illness.
>
> When I was younger I used to compulsively stand on my
> head and swing on bars at gymnastics, while not being
> particularly good at other bits of gym. This is now known
> as a possible preexisting marker of vestibular damage,
> which dramatically worsens motion sickness. Also I had
> noticeable trouble with close visial work painting fine
> details, another relevant issue.
>
> Anybody with such a presumed case of 'sopite syndrome'
> would certainly be affected by flickering fluorescent
> lights, affecting the eyes.
>
> What about mobile phones? 2 things. Firstly, mobile
> phones produce 'digital audio', comparable to digital
> video, and I have been told that some with related brain
> issues are adversely affected by digital audio.
> Additionally, you have an ELF magnetic field, and a
> microwave E field, right next to your head.
>
> It is only hypothetical that if electrosensitivity was a
> form of motion sickness in people with damage to their
> magnetosensitive systems, they may experience a
> worsening of symptoms when their senses, primarily north/
> south, are scrambled by EMFs.
>
> Of course there would be other modes of action.
>
> Various sources have suggested these visual/ brain
> problems with too low resolution monitors to be a
> possible and probable cause of COMPUTE ADDICTION,
> internet addiction, and possibly even television and
> poker machine addiction.
>
> So how to fix a computer monitor. Prio has optometrists
> provide prescription glasses to intentionally fool your
> eyes/ brain into thinking the computer monitor is already
> sitting out there at your dark focus length, in order to
> stop the eyes flicking in and out. This is one solution,
> but long term side effects could possibly occur. It would
> be most interesting to see whether these glasses had any
> effect on members of this group. There is a list of
> practitioners at their website. I am not trying to sell
> snake oil, only wondering.
>
> I think a better solution is to invent an extremely high
> resolution monitor (say 4000 x 3000 pixels instead of the
> current 1024 x 768) and use excellent font antialiasing
> to get rid of the jaggies on the screen. You can't just
> slightly increase the resolution here, that would be a
> waste of time. You have to go right off the deep end.
> Such a projector system currently costs about $80,000 I
> think. Your local computer salesman can't help. Then for
> electrosensitives, somehow slash the emissions, a la
> MultiQ. The military has now admitted that current
> display technology is no where near good enough for their
> human brain requirements (by a factor of 1000) for say
> remote piloting.
>
> It is possible that monitor symptoms with
> electrosensitivity, and certain other medical conditions,
> represent a failure of the visual system in those
> aggravated by EMR. More evidence: it has been considered
> by some that CFS patients display strong 'sensory
> sensitivities' similar to autism, as a result of an
> internal problem (endogenous carbon monoxide poisoning)
> due to a major stress breakdown. Patients develop
> sensitivities of vision (monitor, fluoros), hearing
> (common hyperacusis), touch (sensory defensiveness),
> smell (perfumes etc) and taste (food sensitivities?).
> Regardless, many electrosensitives are sensitized to a
> lot of things. As discussed in motion sickness, this
> would definetly make you more sensitized to a computer
> monitor, and send your sleep racing out the door.
> Possibly if you had been sleeping for years over a
> naturally occuring EMF source it could predispose you.
>
> This is only one theory among many, however I do believe
> that the very obvious subject of CYBERSICKNESS needs to
> be raised as a subject with electrosensitivity.
>
> Regards to all
>
> Rowan Campbell
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
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