What is better for the eyes, a dark color theme or a white color theme?
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1You might also find related answers here : ux.stackexchange.com/questions/52833/…– MervinCommented Mar 2, 2014 at 14:06
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2There are too many elements involved to be able to give you an accurate answer.– PatomaSCommented Mar 2, 2014 at 14:10
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It can't be answered without understanding the full context of the application, the users, the content, the functionality, the use cases, etc, etc.– DA01Commented Mar 2, 2014 at 15:45
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I'm curious, would the limitations of the display technology make a difference as well? Considerations include: How black is black, and how white is white? Do black pixels and white pixels get refreshed equally well? Is there more "bleeding" at the edge of a white pixel if the display is a light source rather than a reflective surface?– 200_successCommented Mar 2, 2014 at 18:31
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5One aspect no one seems to have mentioned is that if your IDE is white-text on black background, every time you context switch to the browser or almost any other app, you are presented with black on white. That makes for a very straining contrast as your eye now has to contract the aperture to reduce the light coming in.– ΚαrτhικCommented Feb 18, 2017 at 22:25
5 Answers
There has been a lot of research on this topic since the 1980s and a lot of it still holds true today. One study from the 1980s states this:
However, most studies have shown that dark characters on a light background are superior to light characters on a dark background (when the refresh rate is fairly high). For example, Bauer and Cavonius (1980) found that participants were 26% more accurate in reading text when they read it with dark characters on a light background.
Reference: Bauer, D., & Cavonius, C., R. (1980). Improving the legibility of visual display units through contrast reversal. In E. Grandjean, E. Vigliani (Eds.), Ergonomic Aspects of Visual Display Terminals (pp. 137-142). London: Taylor & Francis
The reason why this matters is because of focus. As this article on UXMovement states, "white stimulates all three types of color sensitive visual receptors in the human eye in nearly equal amounts." It causes the eye to focus by tightening the iris. Since the eye is focused, dark letter forms on light backgrounds are easier to read. When using a dark background with strong light letter forms, the iris opens to allow more light in, but that causes letter forms to blur. Why?
People with astigmatism (approximately 50% of the population) find it harder to read white text on black than black text on white. Part of this has to do with light levels: with a bright display (white background) the iris closes a bit more, decreasing the effect of the "deformed" lens; with a dark display (black background) the iris opens to receive more light and the deformation of the lens creates a much fuzzier focus at the eye.
Jason Harrison – Post Doctoral Fellow, Imager Lab Manager – Sensory Perception and Interaction Research Group, University of British Columbia
Now there seem to be varying factors into contrast and legibility. Room ambient lighting. Brightness of the monitor. Also you can mitigate the straining effects of white (#FFF) on black (#000) by simply lessening the contrast like using a light gray (#EEE, #DDD, #CCC) on a dark background (#111, #222).
Update (Feb 7, 2020):
A new article from the Nielsen Norman Group entitled, "Dark Mode vs. Light Mode: Which Is Better?", brings some more research to this topic. A couple key findings in the article:
Cosima Piepenbrock and her colleagues at the Institut für Experimentelle Psychologie in Düsseldorf, Germany studied two groups of adults with normal (or corrected-to-normal) vision: young adults (18 to 33 years old) and older adults (60 to 85 years old). None of the participants suffered from any eye diseases (e.g., cataract).
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Their results showed that light mode won across all dimensions: irrespective of age, the positive contrast polarity was better for both visual-acuity tasks and for proofreading tasks. However, the difference between light mode and dark mode in the visual-acuity task was smaller for older adults than for younger adults — meaning that, although light mode was better for older adults, too, they did not benefit from it as much as younger adults, at least in the visual-acuity task.
The research did find though that dark mode seemed to be beneficial for users with impaired vision:
In Legge’s study, each of the 7 participants with cloudy ocular media had better reading rates with dark modes, whereas the rest of the participants, who had impaired central vision, were not affected by contrast polarity.
Though they did note one caveat that this study used CRT displays instead of LEDs displays.
A few takeaways from the article:
- In general, light mode leads to better performance most of the time for users with normal or corrected-to-normal vision.
- While light mode performs better, those gain seem to be more short-term. Long-term exposure may be result in myopia.
- Increased font-size in dark mode doesn't offset the gains from light-mode.
- Providing a dark mode though is still recommended though becomes of the potential long-term effects with light mode, some visual impairments perform better in dark mode, and some users simply prefer it.
- For applications which provide long-form reading (books, articles, even news sites), dark mode options are recommended.
One other note with the studies cited in the article is that the studies focused on "glanceable" reading (i.e. reading 1-2 words on a mobile phone, smartwatch, or car dashboard).
Further reading:
- UX.SE Post: "Which color scheme to choose for applications that require long work hours?"
- Applying Color Theory to Digital Displays
- Why light text on dark backgrounds is a bad idea.
- When to Use White Text on a Dark Background
- Journal of Vision – Interaction of Ambient Lighting and LCD Polarity on Text Processing and Viewing Comfort
- Journal of Vision – Why is light text harder to read than dark text?
- NN/g - Light Mode vs Dark Mode: Which Is Better?
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13One factor to consider which I don't see mentioned is that for applications which require distinguishing the colors of many different objects, I think it's easier to judge colors against a black background than against white.– supercatCommented May 13, 2014 at 13:58
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7Could you point to more recent research on this? Because these results may simply be attributable to the low quality displays of the 80s, or responsible for a significant part of them. Commented Feb 11, 2017 at 20:29
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5I wish I had enough reputation to downvote this. White screens are straining on the eyes and can cause migraines. The cited studies were like short lab studied and not 8h work days.– akuhnCommented Feb 15, 2017 at 6:42
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For me, a dark background in a dark room or a bright background in a bright room is ideal. Bright rooms causes the eye to let less light in, making dark backgrounds and the little bright letters even darker.
As for the dark room: being able to see the rest of the room is important for me to be able to look away from the screen now and then.
Have a look at GPS-devices for use in cars. They have different themes depending on the time of day.
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8I don't know if the GPS example is a great one because a bright GPS screen at night can be distracting to other passing drivers. A bright GPS screen at night would also create a gross imbalance between the brightness of the road and that of the screen, leading to difficulty when repeatedly switching focus. Commented Oct 20, 2016 at 22:39
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1It's recommended to have a background of the same brightness of the room. Having both a bright room and background is much better for reading due to the iris tightening and improving focus.– FedericoCommented May 22, 2019 at 15:07
Computer vision syndrome expert Dr. James Sheedy:
"The best color combination for your eyes is black text on a white background, though other dark-on-light combinations also work well."
SOURCE: http://www.allaboutvision.com/cvs/irritated.htm (independent source of trustworthy information on eye health)
Personally for me light text on dark background strains my eyes, and that's why I have always wondered why so many colleagues use light text on dark background, and keep saying it's better for the eye, since for me only normal thing has been dark text on white background.
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5I have a hunch that statement was an over-generalization. It's never really been true in print, for example. Black on off-white or gray, sure...but not pure white.– DA01Commented Mar 2, 2014 at 15:48
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1@DA01 yeah, that's why the sentence ends "though other dark-on-light combinations also work well".– Samuel MCommented Mar 2, 2014 at 16:27
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The bias may be, in part, not due to qualities of the colour scheme in and of itself, but rather the high brightness of the monitors being used, especially in a poorly-lit environment. A dark background would emit far less vivid light levels than a light background. Commented Jun 21, 2016 at 21:08
Two things that can make this an "it depends" issue are environment and visual impairment.
Using an app at night might make lighter text on a dark background better. For example, I find it less straining (and certainly less annoying to my wife) to use a dark background reading e-books in bed). Someone needing to preserve night vision or security, such as military or law enforcement, might also require much less light emission. Another factor might be the content displayed in an application. For instance, where the content is primarily videos or movies, a darker, more "cinematic" UI will be appropriate.
Some visual impairments require high-contrast for legibility and this is occasionally aided by being able to select a reversed foreground/background color set.
You may be talking about strain and not personal taste. One thing I know, though, is that it is somewhat physically painful to look at themes that have dark backgrounds with extremely bright (high brightness and saturation) foreground icons/text. If you choose dark backgrounds, lessen the brightness and saturation but make it still readable without effort.
White background with dark text is commonplace, and I haven't heard of any eye strain complaint about it. Bright backgrounds such as #00ffff (aqua) with dark text are very straining, though.