IS NEARSIGHTEDNESS FUELED BY LOW LIGHT? For years, everyone’s blamed smartphones and computer screens for the worldwide explosion in nearsightedness. But what if screens are just part of the picture? According to researchers at the SUNY College of Optometry, there’s another, sneakier culprit: dim indoor lighting, especially when paired with long stretches of close-up work. Here’s the gist: whenever you’re hunched over your phone or a book in a softly lit room, your eyes are straining in ways you might not realize. The pupil, which works like a camera shutter, shrinks to sharpen your focus on nearby objects. But in dim light, that same constriction means the retina—the part of your eye that actually “sees”—is getting less light than it needs. Over time, this could lead to changes in the eye that make distant objects appear blurry. In other words, it’s not just the glowing rectangle in your hand, but how and where you use it. A Modern Epidemic Let’s talk numbers: nearly half of young adu...