blurbustingbunny wrote:If I am not sensitive to LED Clear Motion on a samsung TV, would I be sensitive to DyAc?
If your eyes tolerates LED Clear Motion on a Samsung TV, then probably not.
Samsung LED Clear Motion is a strobe-based motion blur reduction (blur reduction strobe backlights are "1-pulse precision PWM").
To avoid duplicate-image-related eyestrain, remember to have
framerate = refreshrate = stroberate.
So as a rule of thumb, increase GPU power, lower refresh rate, until your frame rates match your strobed refresh rate, and you've got motion nirvana.
However, one caveat:
The XL2546 is extremely bright, and you sit much closer than with a television.
As a result, follow these general practices for lowest eyestrain with motion blur reduction:
- Increase GPU power, lower detail, lower Hz, until fps=Hz
- Slightly increase viewing distance
- Add extra lighting behind your monitor (improve ambient lighting) so your screen is no longer the obviously brightest object in room
- Adjust brightness of strobe (or shorten strobe length / lower persistence in Strobe Utility) so it's not too bright.
- Possibly also turn off your strobe mode whenever you're not doing motion (e.g. static material like Microsoft Word)
- If you get eyestrain, try dimming brightness even further and use low-blue-light mode. (To cover the potential "red herring" or "wild goose chase" effect: if your eyestrain was unknowingly actually caused by excess blue light rather than from the flicker).
This will help ergonomics.