Article URL: https://studyfinds.com/modern-decor-may-be-straining-peoples-brains/ Comments URL: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48873424 Points: 77 # Comments: 59

Striped office floors. Flickering lights. Walls covered in repetitive geometric patterns. For many people (including those who are neurodivergent or who live with migraines, epilepsy, or other neurological conditions), these everyday features of modern life are more than an eyesore. They may be causing real physical distress, and a new scientific review sets out a detailed hypothesis to explain why. A large team of researchers from institutions across the United States, United Kingdom, Europe, Asia, and Canada has published a detailed review arguing that visual discomfort, the headaches, eye strain, nausea, and perceptual distortions that some people experience in response to certain visual stimuli, has a measurable, physical basis in the brain. The paper, published in the journal Vision, pulls together decades of research across neuroscience, architecture, lighting design, and psychology to build a unified theory of why some things are so hard to look at, and what can be done about it. At its core, the argument is this: the human brain evolved to process the natural world efficiently. When it’s forced to handle the highly repetitive, artificially sharp, and often flickering patterns that dominate modern urban environments — think fluorescent-lit offices, car headlights, striped acoustic panels, or the dense text of a printed page — the researchers argue it may drive greater neural activity than it should, potentially placing excessive demands on the visual cortex. That metabolic overload, they hypothesize, may be what triggers discomfort, and in people with pattern-sensitive epilepsy, it can provoke seizures. To understand why modern environments can be so hard on the brain, it helps to know how the visual system is built. Eyes and brain alike evolved over millennia to process natural scenes, forests, rivers, coastlines, open skies. These environments share a specific mathematical pattern: their visual complexity decreases predictably as you zoom in on finer and finer details. Natural scenes follow this rule almost universally. Modern human-made environments frequently do not. Striped wallpaper, gridded building facades, acoustic ceiling tiles, even the lines of printed text create patterns that deviate sharply from what the brain expects. And when the brain encounters something it can’t process efficiently, it doesn’t simply adapt. Brain imaging studies cited in the review show it generates stronger neural responses in visual areas, consumes more oxygen, and in some people produces pain, distortion, or worse. “We hypothesize that the discomfort is a homeostatic response to the excessive oxygen demands of the visual cortex due to inefficient encoding of the visual stimuli,” the authors write in the paper. Essentially. the brain is sounding an alarm because it’s being overworked. Brain imaging research cited in the review shows that uncomfortable images, particularly striped, high-contrast patterns, produce much larger responses in visual areas of the brain than natural images do. Tinted glasses chosen specifically for a patient with migraines were shown in one study to normalize that overactive brain response. Patients who viewed comfortable building images in another study showed smaller brain responses and also rated those images as easier to look at. Most people experience some degree of visual discomfort at some point. But the burden is not shared equally. People who are neurodivergent, a broad term covering autism, ADHD, dyslexia, and related conditions, are disproportionately affected. So are people with migraines, epilepsy, anxiety, depression, and a range of other neurological conditions.