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[_] Anonymous 01/08/20(Wed)13:55:51 No.3414346
Marked for deletion (old).
>> [_] Anonymous 01/08/20(Wed)14:57:01 No.3414349
cool, hadn't seen this in like 2 years now
>> [_] Anonymous 01/09/20(Thu)00:19:15 No.3414384
thank god im not epileptic
>> [_] Anonymous 01/09/20(Thu)06:51:00 No.3414393
>>3414384
well you have the odds with you.
only ~40 million people in the world have epilepsy and 80% are in developing countries.
medication can keep 70% of all epilepsy cases under control.
and out of those 40 million people only 3% have PSE (photosensitive epilepsy) that MAYBE are
affected by the flash
in short people think epilepsy is way more common than it actually is. you can travel the world
all your life and never come in contact with anyone with PSE
sources:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Epilepsy#Epidemiology
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Causes_of_seizures#Vision
>> [_] Anonymous 01/09/20(Thu)06:59:57 No.3414394
should be noted though that https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Photosensitive_epilepsy says 1 in 4000
people have PSE, which is 5% of those with epilepsy.
that means 20 out of 4000 people have epilepsy, which is 0.005% of the world population (7.53
billion), which is 37.65 million people. so the math checks out (~40 million people).
still, assuming 5% it's only 0.00025% of the world population = 1.8825 million people with PSE
world-wide. and 80% of those are still in developing countries and many can be controlled with
medication. so blinking lights are still a minuscule problem to a very small group of people.
>> [_] Anonymous 01/09/20(Thu)07:56:19 No.3414398
>>3414393
>>3414394
> An Anon that actually links his sources
Very informative, thanks!
We need more people like you.
>> [_] Anonymous 01/09/20(Thu)17:24:38 No.3414420
>>3414398
>wikipedia
well, sure, better than nothing I guess
>> [_] Anonymous 01/09/20(Thu)17:32:38 No.3414421
>>3414394
I think you mean 0.5%.