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I am adding a bounty to this question, hoping for some scientific research results. Thank you everybody!


I have recently tried working on dark backgrounds, and it seemed (to me) to be easier on the eye. However, today I read Gerrie Schenck's comment on this answer, in which he said that mainframe developers were advised to use white backgrounds instead of black, as it is said that white is easier on the eye.

So which one is actually better for the eyes in the long run? I would be thankful for any (scientific) references about the subject, as my eyes really need some relaxation.

I wanted to make this question a community wiki, but I think that the least I can do to thank people is to reward their answers, so I'm leaving it as a normal question.

Many, many thanks for your help.

P.S. I don't know which tags would be appropriate for this question, so I'd be grateful if you could tag it in a better way than I did.

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I looked for published scientific research on your question. There's quite a lot out there, the trouble is technology has changed a lot and so for a lot of them it's unclear whether the research on television screens still applies. I found two recent papers which researched text on screen, both of them comparing white-on-black and black-on-white in experimental setups. Both of them found that black text on a white background is the most effective combination.

Hall and Hanna (2004) examined how colour combination affects readability and retention by experimenting on 186 test subjects. They found that both the readability scores (measured subjectively through a questionnaire) and the retention scores (measured through a quiz) were higher (i.e. better) when the text was displayed black on white as opposed to white on black.

Buchner and Baumgartner (2007) performed a similar experiment on 80 test subjects, except they measured the subject's performance on a proofreading task on a TFT display (Hall & Hanna did not mention the type of display they used). Buchner and Baumgartner arrived at a similar conclusion, with users consistently achieving higher proofreading scores when a black-on-white colour scheme was used.

So it appears that we can be quite sure in concluding that black-on-white text has been experimentally determined to be better for comprehension than white-on-black text when computer displays are involved. This is also backed up by a lot of older research on older monitors such as television screens.

However I should add that this does not eliminate the possibility that black-on-white still produces higher reader fatigue. If I find papers on that I'll let you know.

References:
Below I include links to the two papers I just described. I'm not sure how familiar you are with scientific journals, but sometimes authors are allowed to post draft versions on their websites, which, being draft versions, may have errors not present in the final versions. The problem being, of course, that you need to have a subscription to access the final versions. So that is why we make do for the freely-available versions of the papers.

RH Hall, P Hanna - "The Impact of Web Page Text-Background Color Combinations on Readability, Retention, Aesthetics, and Behavioral Intention" - Behaviour & Information Technology, 2004 - http://sigs.aisnet.org/sighci/bit04/BIT_Hall.pdf

A Buchner and N Baumgartner - "Text – background polarity affects performance irrespective of ambient illumination and colour contrast" - Ergonomics, 2007 - http://www.psycho.uni-duesseldorf.de/abteilungen/aap/Dokumente/Ergonomics-2007-Text-background-polarity.pdf

Visual fatigue research: Unfortunately I could not find very much research which measured computer screen visual fatigue in comparison to black-on-white text as opposed to white-on-black. The only piece I could find was a short reference in "Reading text from computer screens" by Mills and Weldon (1987) from the journal ACM Computing Surveys. Section 4.1 of that paper, titled "polarity", goes over important works at the time, including this piece:

In contrast to the results in these studies, Cushman [1986] found that subjects who read continuous text from positive contrast (light character) VDTs reported less visual fatigue (as measured on a subjective rating scale) than those who read from negative contrast (dark character) VDTs.

I've tried hard to access the Cushman (1986) paper, titled "Reading from microfiche, a VDT, and the printed page: subjective fatigue and performance" in the journal Human Factors, but I cannot get it with my current subscriptions without paying $25. So I'm unable to tell you anything about the experimental setup of Cushman or whether his or her claims still apply today.

Even though Cushman appears to make the conclusion that a light-on-dark colour scheme actually induces less fatigue, I think there's one caveat to remember. Mills and Weldon also mention that back in those days, computer screens used a light-on-dark colour scheme because flicker was less apparent. It's possible that the flicker of the dark-on-light scheme was causing the visual fatigue. These days, monitors don't flicker (as much), and so the claim probably still does not hold. This makes me question whether flicker is actually the true primary cause of computer screen visual fatigue, maybe I should look into this.

Another interesting point, Mills and Weldon also say black-on-white text on paper is more readable "due primarily to the larger number of eye fixations required to read white print on a black background," for which they cite a paper by Taylor (1936) called "The relative legibility of black and white print" in the Journal of Educational Psychology. So if we presume that the same reason applies to computer screens, then that is the root cause for all of this contrast polarity readability business! It's all because of eye fixations.

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I find an almost-black background quite comfortable and my last eye test was the same prescription for the past two years.

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Not exactly scientific, but I've always found Maddox's argument on the subject compelling:

I've chosen a black background for most of my text because it's easier on the eyes than staring at a white screen. Think about it: your monitor is not a piece of paper, no matter how hard you try to make it one. Staring at a white background while you read is like staring at a light bulb (don't believe me? Try turning off the lights next time you use a word processor). Would you stare at a light bulb for hours at a time? Not if you want to keep your vision.

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I find Maddox's views on most subjects compelling. – Rob Burke Jan 31 at 14:34
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Maddox is insane if he really believes this. – Software Monkey Feb 13 at 4:50
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I've tried white and black backgrounds and I honestly prefer white. It's partly to do with the code highlighting (I could change these but I'm used to certain colours) becoming illegible on dark backgrounds (mainly purple) and partly because I find black too overpowering (and therefore difficult to read). I also find it difficult to read from a black screen when wearing my contacts (subscription isn't as accurate as my glasses - and it's impossible to make it sharper without paying a lot).

When transferring from white to black and to white again I did notice white was slightly more harsh at first but you adapt fairly quickly. In contrast black is a lot less harsh. It also lights up your desk less (insomniac...).

On an ecological note black screens use less power =P

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I used to use a black background on my text editor (back when I was using a language where I had a bucketload of colours for syntax highlighting). I found it easier to pick a large set of easily-distinguishable colours that way.

I use a white background now. I haven't noticed any significant differences in eyestrain, but I'm not an ergonomics researcher, and it was only ever my text editor (and command prompt), not other windows.

There's one particular blog I read which is white-on-black text. I've found that if I don't ratchet the font size up for that blog, reading for more than a minute or so leaves me half-blind with after-images for several seconds when I look away. I don't know why this should be, but I take it as a sign that dark backgrounds and small text are probably a bad combination for me. But then I wouldn't want to use small text all day in the first place.

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There is no doubt that a white background can be more harmful than a black one, but it depends on the brightness of your monitor. I recently got a new 24" monitor which is very bright. At the time I was always using white backgrounds for developing which was fine during the day but when it got dark my eyes would get increasingly irritated and itchy. Of course you can offset this somewhat by changing your monitor's brightness during the course of the day but I really found a dark background to be helpful.

Scott Hanselman had a useful post with a number of dark themes for Visual Studio: linkage. I particular like the last theme.

I can still get a little annoyed when, during the night, I need to go to the screamingly bright SO site to solve a problem :)

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I've never used a black background for programming, but I do notice that when looking at web sites I prefer lighter backgrounds with dark text as opposed to dark background with light text. The reason seems to be that going from a dark background to a light background strains my eyes. Since most sites go with a light background and dark foreground I think staying with a white background is less strain if your work involves using other applications that use white backgrounds.

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A lot of wrong answers here.

Black screens do not use less power. The back lights use the same power, but their light is blocked more.

If you turn down the brightness you will most likely use less power.

Staring at white screen is of course not the same as staring at a light bulb. Just as it is not the same as staring at the sun. Luminance levels are completely different.

Most monitors have 'text' option for their brightness/contrast. Use this one or just turn down the brightness and contrast to a reasonable level.

As for white on black or black on white - look for a second at the monitor. The answer is in front of you. Smarter people have already decided what is best. (hint: black on white)

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Boris, you're new here aren't you ;) May I suggest a less confrontional approach to your answer. At SO there is a more friendly approach to opposing opinions than you will find in NGs and Forums. – AnthonyWJones Jan 31 at 12:35
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I find full black backgrounds tend to create overly vibrant displays but white backgrounds are harder on the eyes over time. One option is dark but not black lower contrast background. For example Zenburn

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As someone who is starring at code all day long, i have tried both dark and light backgrounds. I've found the easiest combination for my eyes has been a dark (not black) shade with lighter (not white) text with subtle colour syntax highlighting.

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I think that white versus black backgrounds are simply a matter of personal preference. Judging by the number of websites, desktop environments etc that default to bright backgrounds it seems that most people prefer a white background.

What is far more important is the relation of your monitor's brightness to the lighting of your room. Never sit in front of a monitor in a dark room. Even with a black background, you still get a huge contrast.

A quick google scholar search turned up this review study. It's not exactly written with programmers in mind, but it gives some good hints.

Also, never forget that even your background may be black, that doesn't mean that your monitor isn't bright. You can easily light a room with a monitor that shows nothing but black.

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I personally find white text on a black background looks great - for a few minutes. After that it starts to make me feel nauseous.

I guess it's a personal preference thing.

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In a dark room i prefer dark background (and low lit fonts) and the opposite in bright environments.

Bright screen in dark environment is more noticeable eyestrain than dark screen (with well lit fonts) in a bright environment.

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Maybe not answer to your question but if you have eye problems I recommend you to learn touch typing and stop looking at both your keyboard and monitor while typing. Instead look out of the window or something.

I actually believe that I even write faster this way because i can focus entirely on my fingers and not try to connect what i see with what I'm thinking.

Might be a bit hard when programming but if you're writing plain text it's really comfortable.

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A response to what @Chris Pebble quoted re: Maddox's pro-black background.

Ironic Sans: Ow My Eyes

It's a page of white on black text. Read the paragraph and then click the link at the bottom to invert the colours and see which you find easier.

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Although that example does illustrate a difference, it's contrived because the text is bold and the line spacing is narrow. I wouldn't make a web page like that. It's possible for light text on a dark background to be easy on the eyes depending on the font, font weight, and line spacing. – Jeff Jan 31 at 15:37
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You want the light being emitted from your screen similar to the rooms lighting environment.

A book uses subtractive colour. A bit of white paper reflects light, the text "blocks" the light. The paper is never brighter than the light hitting that paper (which your eye is used to)

A black screen is emitting less light. That is how additive colour works. In a dark room, the screen is emitting the same amount of light as in broad daylight. That is the problem, not the actual colours.

Somewhat-proof, the link posted by nickf: Ironic Sans: Ow My Eyes. If you read that in a well lit room, the black-on-white will be the most pleasant to read. If you read it in a dark room, the white-on-black will be nicer.

The reason I have most applications configured as dark as possible is the monitor is almost always brighter than it's surroundings.

Ideally the "bright bits" would match a white bit of paper in the same room, the blacks would match a black bit of paper. The black of a monitor should match (although there is some influence from the backlight), but the whites are not (as the monitor is a light source).. thus, having less whites on screen means less artificially bright light.

Summarised less horribly:

  • Turn down the brightness on your screen, to match the light levels in the room.
  • If you don't want to do that (if you care about colour replication at all, or it's inconvenient, for example), use a black background, with light (but not white) text. I tend to use a dark grey background, with light coloured text (the TextMate theme "Pastels on Dark" is a great example).
  • Try and keep the environment well lit, especially around your monitor (a lamp behind the screen is great)
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Just read: http://www.ironicsans.com/owmyeyes/ , which is interesting.. but why do eclipse/vs use a white background with a black font then? Is there a scientific explanation for this?

I think we all agree that colors like pink, red or yellow are bad for text in general (except to mark something), but what about blue for example? It has the shotest wavelength and I always thought the default windows xp background color is blue because of this..

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Choose 2 complementary colours that are close to each other in the spectrum. Excellent choices are yellow and blue. (In fact my old Amstrad CPC464 came with bright yellow text on a mid blue background).

That said, you do not want to swap them round and have yellow backgrounds. There are other psychological aspects that you need to be aware of.

I think the white v black debate rages on partly because black text on a white background is how you read paper, the trouble with that is that paper isn't a light source, unlike your monitor.

So I recommend complementary colours that have sufficient contrast and that make you feel good about viewing them. I use a light cream background to my windows and that seems to help with the "glare" of overly bright windows.

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I've switched a lot of my programs to a black background, and sometimes use my Mac in negative mode (from the accessibility) so my IDE runs in black.

I find the reduced amount of light more comfortable.

When I was a kid and had CRTs, my eyes used to hurt a lot.

However, I can think of a possible medical reason (though I have no idea if it is valid); the risk for cataracts is supposedly increased by exposure to blue light (e.g., starting at the sky / sea) or even things that have a blue component (white snow). Maybe a black background reduces the amount of blue light that you stare into. Though that could be complete BS.

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Have you tried using a yellow background. For paper, yellow is easier to read than white. That is why it is used on yellow legal pads and the original yellow post-it-notes.

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As a side note, for people who use multifocal eyeglasses, a white background is preferable. When it is white over black, text gets more distorted in the peripheral vision.

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Although not strictly about health effects, a guideline for optimal text readability can be found in chapter 11 of "Research-Based Web Design & Usability Guidelines" by the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services:

Guideline: When users are expected to rapidly read and understand prose text, use black text on a plain, high-contrast, non-patterned background.

Comments: Black text on a plain background elicited reliably faster reading performance than on a medium-textured background. When compared to reading light text on a dark background, people read black text on a white background up to thirty-two percent faster. In general, the greater the contrast between the text and background, the easier the text is to read.

Sources: Boyntoin and Bush, 1956; Bruce and Green, 1990; Cole and Jenkins, 1984; Evans, 1998; Goldsmith, 1987; Gould, et al., 1987a; Gould, et al., 1987b; Jenkins and Cole, 1982; Kosslyn, 1994; Muter and Maurutto, 1991; Muter, 1996; Scharff, Ahumada and Hill, 1999; Snyder, et al., 1990; Spencer, Reynolds and Coe, 1977a; Spencer, Reynolds and Coe, 1977b; Treisman, 1990; Williams, 2000.

The comment leaves open the question, if light text on dark background would be an acceptable alternative. Perhaps the sources provide more evidence.

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How many of the people who have answered so far are over 40 years old and spent years using traditional CRT monochrome text-only monitors?

Apple were the first mainstream micro manufacturer to ship black text on a white background. Before I bought my first Mac, I had a VT220 which had that option and was happy to turn it on. The reason it took a while to be feasible is very simple - the resolution of dots available was too low to be able to read black dots as being consecutive lines. White dots blurred into a line with the coarse fonts available at the time, up until around 1984.

Something to consider in this debate is what value of white people are using. My monitors are set to a fairly yellowish white by contrast with the blueish-white to which VGA defaults on Windows.

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Black text on white background.
I have two links for you, but they are both in German.
To summarize:

  • If you are working with paper (black on white) and the computer simultaneously then it's harder for the eyes to adapt to changing contrasts, if your monitor show white on black
  • There are less reflexions if the monitor background is white
  • The visual acuity (I hope I translated this correctly) is better at a lower contrast level, if you use black on white

Links:
http://www.ergo-online.de/site.aspx?url=html/grundkurs_bueroalltag/richtiges_einstellen/den_bildschirm_richtig_einste.htm

http://www.uni-siegen.de/fb11/aws/literatur/pdf/komp4.pdf

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Depends on what are you doing. I am using white background. I tried with black background few months ago, hoping it will be easier on my eyes.
But, it actually get worst. Not because white text on black background, but because of other objects on screen.
I am working mainly on ASP.Net and some WPF in VS2008. Code editor is only 40-45% of my screen. Rest is covered with menus and toolbars. I tried with full screen editor, but switching windows was annoying.
Finally, I gave up on black background because contrast between editor and other windows was even harder on my eyes.
This was just my experience, not scientific research. Black background could be fine if I get a work that is manly server side - no UI, no need for toolbars. Or if there is some nice dark windows theme that will go nice with black background in editor.

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Most of the actual research quoted so far seems to indicate that, with high-res fonts at least, black-on-white is easier to read (speed of reading, as well as comprehension) and feels more "natural" (it can, and has been, shown that it's actually not so natural) due to us being used to reading black on white paper.

But much of the subjective, anecdotal, feeling (I wasn't counting, but seemed like the majority) was that white on black is easier on the eyes.

These forces are not irreconcilable. Even if you take out environmental factors (e.g., the advice that you should make sure the environment is lit well enough to match your display) - it may still be that you can read faster and more easily with b-o-w, but the overall brightness may still cause tiredness sooner than w-o-b.

I don't apologise for the few weasel phrases above - I'm not trying to make an absolute statement - just expressing my views.

But where this all leads me is that the optimum is dark text on a light background - but not black on white. The contrast should be high enough that the text is easy to extract without strain, but no more.

My personal favourite scheme (and I was pleased to see it's now been ported to XCode and TextMate, as well as Visual Studio) is Humane.

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I think high contrast is the most important factor. I'm pretty happy with the black on white that is the default in Visual Studio, Google, this editor, etc. However, I don't mind extended sessions in a command window either (white(ish) on black). Here are some links to studies pertaining to computer screen color schemes:

Some research has confirmed the connection between color and the interface’s visible structure. Taylor and Murch (1986) reviewed principles for effective color coding on video monitors. They found that not all colors were equally legible. Dark spectrum extreme colors, like red or blue, make good background colors. Desaturated hues and bright center spectrum colors, like green and yellow, make text that is more legible.

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Personal, non scientific viewpoint, I tend to prefer darker text on a lighter background.

Have found using dark greens quite useful, and tend to use shades of green for window chrome. Quasi scientific reason is that human eyes have more receptors for green, possibly as a result of evolving in an environment with a crapload of green (used to be anyway). Might be total BS, but it kinda works for me.

Was also raised on green screens, so have a nostalgic preference for a green vibe.

2 important things:

  • every now and then, step away from the computer, do something else.
  • BLINK. Harder to remember at 3am when the #$^%ing stack dump makes no ^#$^%ing sense... do it now, just in case you forget later.

I was having a lot of eye problems a few months back, possibly needing minor surgery, had a few weeks (mostly) off over Christmas, and all better now, no surgery needed.

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The Maddox link's rather contrived. I've stared bright on dark backgrounds with little problem.

Right now my Visual Studios is configured on a dark grey background with light grey/pastel text on top. I don't have any problems staring at it.

My problem for black on white is that over time, the floaters in my eyes becomes very visible and distracting with the large patches of uniform white background. If you're looking at the outdoors, enough things break the monotony, so that you don't actually see the floaters.

You're going to have to pry my pastel on black scheme from my cold dead hands.

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Programming is not reading. I prefer to read black on white. I prefer to write text in Word black-on-white. But I've discovered it's easier on my eyes, when programming, to use light on dark.

Font choice is important, too. I use consolas when programming, but I'd never use it for reading English text.

I think that's where most of these discussions fall apart. People bring up studies on reading, and they point to bad MySpace pages with hard-to-read text. Reading a blog is not programming.

Spend some time making two environments--one with a dark background and one with a light background. Try them both. For me, it's dead easy--I go right to the dark one. I'm fully willing to accept that people may choose differently. When I use light backgrounds my eyes hurt at the end of the day.

I've also noticed that people have different sensitivities to flicker. If I sit down at a 60Hz monitor, I'll complain. I can't believe that people can use 60Hz, especially with white backgrounds, but they do. 75Hz or better helps me. One thing I liked about old monitors was that they had really long persistence. This caused ghosting when the text was scrolled, and was terrible for games, but it really eased my eyes.

I'm assuming anyone who is like me (sensitive to flicker) will prefer to program light-on-dark.

Paper doesn't flicker. It doesn't have a refresh rate.

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