2
Apr

I wear glasses and whenever I go see a 3D I wear the 3D glasses on top of my regular glasses. Unfortunately, I always get headaches doing that and have a hard time enjoying the film as I would if my eyes could rest. Is it because I'm wearing the 3D glasses over regular ones or is it coincidental? Would I be superior off wearing contacts to these movies?


Answer:
There’s an increased risk of headaches for *all*, watching 3D films.

The method produces extra stress on binocular coordination, which doesn't show if the eyes have spare binocular capacity, tolerance, but can produce tiredness or discomfort if the binocular lock is marginal (but fine and problem free under normal circumstances)

Given the two dissociated images on a cinema screen a phoria (potential misalignment of the eyes, but quite normal) might move from compensated to uncompensated. In more marked cases either double vision or loss of the 3D effect might result.
In people wearing or not wearing glasses.


Answer:
It's probably because you're wearing 3D glasses over your regular glasses. I always used to have this problem with 3D movies, until the new format came out (I think it's “Real 3D or something). I saw Coraline with my glasses under the 3D glasses and it didn't bother me. I always try to remember to wear my contacts though just to make it easier on my eyes, plus its more comfortable without 2 pairs of glasses on.

Answer:
I get headaches regardless of whether I wear eyeglasses or contact lenses. I’ve strabismus and I have trouble with my binocular vision. My right eye has normal vision and my left eye has moderate astigmatism.

If I watch a 3D motion picture, I see two slightly overlapping images and will get nasty headaches. The effects are just less bad when I wear a contact lens in my left eye.


Answer:
I always wear the 3d glasses over my other glasses and it has never bothered me. Imax has larger glasses made to go over perscription glasses but the regular size is fine for me also.

This entry was posted on Thursday, April 2nd, 2009 at 4:21 am and is filed under Optical. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or TrackBack URI from your own site.

Leave a reply

Name (*)
Mail (*)
URI
Comment