More threads by 1210donna

1210donna

Member
With the new government proposal to phase out incandescent light bulbs, what about those on the autism spectrum with the visual perceptual processing challenge of Scotopic Sensitivity Syndrome who struggle to concentrate, read and learn under fluorescent lighting? I always squinted in bright light and under fluorescent lights. There were some fluorescent lit rooms I couldn?t stay seated in, others I would struggle to listen in and some I just plain wouldn?t enter.

In the book Like Colour To The Blind I wrote about my first experiences with tinted lenses for Scotopic Sensitivity Syndrome. Essentially we all process light frequencies differently and some of us struggle to process certain light frequencies more than other people do. The result can be that its hard to read if the brightness of the page seems to pulsate, making the words floaty or seem to move or swim about on the page. So, needless to say, I never became much of a reader even though I?m a prolific writer.

But the fluorescent lights did something else too. They made people?s faces seem ?in bits?, like trying to read when in a moving car, looking at faces made me feel edgy, queasy and visual chaos seemed far more messy than in dim light.

Tinted lenses, omega 3s, Glutamine and low salicylate diet helped solve much of that and was a better alternative than asking everyone to replace their fluoros with incandescent wall lights, lamps or natural light. But I still turned them off where possible.

As a consultant I advised teachers to seat children with these problems under a strip of ceiling without the fluorescent lighting and progressive studies have backed up what I wrote of in Autism; An Inside Out Approach and The Jumbled Jigsaw about the impact of turning off fluorescent lights on behavior management, attention span and learning.

But now the is going to bring the fluorescent bulbs home as well.

I say keep the sunglasses on standby, the peaked cap at the read, bye those standing lamps and frosted, scalloped wall light fittings, those uplighter shades, those yellow deflectors that add the missing yellow back into the color spectrum which is missing from fluorescent lights.

Do I want to argue for incandescent lights for people on the autistic spectrum with these visual perceptual challenges? I think they?ll suffer far more from the impact of global warming. But I do think we need to respect the needs of those with visual perceptual disabilities and the impact that overwhelming and fragmenting their senses will have on slowing their information processing, contributing to loss of information processing, inattention and behavior management challenges.

You knew the job was dangerous when you took it Super Chicken.

http://www.donnawilliams.net
 

Mari

MVP
H! I am concerned about the use of flourescent lighting especially if choice is not allowed. I have Menier's Disease and I find the constant buzz and the flickering very disturbing. After about twenty minutes I start to become disoriented and it sometimes reaches the point where I can barely walk or talk. I worry about young people who sit in school all day under the lights - some who may be affected and no-one realizes it is causing them problems. Mari
 

1210donna

Member
excellent point Mari,

I think perceptual differences need to be considered.
what works for some doesn't work for all.

:) Donna *)
 
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