Modern decor may be straining people's brains
6 hours ago
- #environmental design
- #visual discomfort
- #neurodiversity
- Striped patterns, flickering lights, and repetitive geometric designs can cause physical distress like headaches and nausea, especially for neurodivergent individuals.
- Researchers hypothesize that artificial visual patterns overload the brain's visual cortex, increasing neural activity and metabolic demands, leading to discomfort.
- People with autism, ADHD, migraines, and other conditions are more affected, possibly due to reduced ability to suppress overactive visual signals.
- Modern environments with unnatural patterns deviate from the brain's evolved preference for natural scenes, triggering stronger neural responses and discomfort.
- Flickering LED lights, car headlights, and high-contrast patterns are key triggers, with flicker causing phantom array effects that distress migraine sufferers.
- Design solutions include reducing contrast in patterns, avoiding striped panels, using predictive software, and personalized tinted glasses to alleviate symptoms.
- The review unifies cross-disciplinary research, arguing visual discomfort has a measurable brain basis and calls for collaborative efforts in design and neuroscience.