Some more sensitive people can
People with epilepsy can have their seizures triggered by flashing lights
Seizures for people who have photosensitive epilepsy. They are caused by reactions to light, like flashing lights, strobe lights, flickering lights etc.
Yes, they will. Strobe lights overwhelm the person's brain frequency and it gets confused. After that, the person goes into seizures. It can cause death, so it is best to avoid strobe lights if you have seizures.
There could be many causes for the flickering instrument panel lights, but the most probable cause is a loose connection in the circuit providing the power to the lights, or a loose or poor ground connection.
You turn it off by flicking the switch on the right of the DS.
No, but they can cause seizures in people who have epilepsy.
Yes, flicking the light on and off fast does waste power. Turn the light on only when you need the light to see something in that room. Turn the light off when you leave the room to conserve power.
There are many causes of seizures. Flashing lights or strobe lights can trigger seizures in people who have what is known as photosensitive epilepsy, but that is only about 3% of people who have epilepsy. Lights are technology, so for those people, then it can, but for most people with epilepsy, it is not a risk.
It is called flipping someone off
The Polyfuze Method.
NO! Flashing lights causes seizures, NOT autism. An autistic child may be entranced in them, though...
Being off certain medications for one to two days may trigger seizures. Certain procedures used during EEG may trigger seizures in persons with epilepsy. Those procedures include flashing lights and deep breathing.