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Test de sensibilité à l'éblouissement

Voyez à quel point une source lumineuse réduit votre vision des faibles contrastes — un test relatif d'éblouissement et de conduite de nuit.

~3 minDurée
Disability-glare low-contrast screen (relative)Méthode
GratuitCoût

Ce que ça mesure

This check gives a rough, relative sense of your disability glare susceptibility — how much a bright glare source placed next to a faint, low-contrast target hurts your ability to read it. It compares the faintest contrast you can read in glare-free conditions against the faintest you can read with a bright light beside the target.

Comment ça marche

First you read a descending ladder of low-contrast digits with no glare, noting the faintest step you can identify. Then you read the same ladder again, but this time a bright, glowing white patch sits right beside each target — mimicking a headlight or low sun in your field of view. Bright light scatters inside the eye (intraocular straylight), forming a veil of light over the retina that washes out faint contrast. The bigger the drop between your no-glare and with-glare results, the more that scattered light is disabling your vision. Because this runs on an ordinary screen, it is a relative, experimental comparison rather than a calibrated measurement.

Conseils pour un résultat fiable

  • 1Keep both rounds identical except for the glareSame distance, same brightness, same room lighting. The number that matters is the difference the bright light makes, so everything else should stay the same between rounds.
  • 2Notice glare in real life tooIf oncoming headlights at night, wet roads, or low sun strongly wash out your vision or throw halos and starbursts around lights, that real-world experience is far more telling than any screen test.
  • 3Re-test if a result surprises youScreen reflections, a bright window behind you, or tired eyes can all skew a round. If the drop seems unexpectedly large, control your lighting and run it again before reading anything into it.

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