If you've ever stared at a wall of TVs trying to justify the massive price jump to 8K, a new study from the University of Cambridge and Meta Reality Labs suggests you can probably save your money. The research, just published in the journal Nature, digs into the practical limits of human vision, and the results are a splash of cold water on high-resolution marketing.
The study (via The Guardian) moves away from simple resolution numbers (like 4K or 8K) and instead focuses on “Pixels Per Degree” (PPD), a metric that measures how much detail you can actually perceive at a given distance. Using a 4K monitor viewed at various distances, researchers tested how well participants could distinguish fine patterns in both black and white colours.

Image credit: University of Cambridge
The study concludes that our eyes are at their best when perceiving brightness and contrast (in greyscale), where we can distinguish details up to approximately 94 PPD. However, our ability to see fine colour detail is significantly worse. The test showed our limit for red and green patterns drops to around 89 PPD, and for yellow and purple, it plummets to just 63 PPD. In short, our eyes are built to be much more sensitive to contrast than to high-resolution colour information.
So, what does this mean for your living room? The researchers translated these findings into a real-world scenario. For a person sitting on a sofa roughly 2.5 metres away from a 44-inch television, a QHD (1440p) resolution is already “crisp”. This implies that upgrading to 4K, let alone 8K, on a screen that size would provide no perceivable visual improvement unless you either move your sofa significantly closer or buy a much larger display. The study suggests that an 80-inch 8K TV only reveals its extra detail when you are sitting just 2 metres away from it.
It's important to note that the study has some limitations. The trial involved only 18 participants, with an average age of 26. Therefore, these figures may not apply to everyone, especially older individuals or those with different visual acuity.
KitGuru says: How is your TV positioned within the table?
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Mid-size 8K displays might be a waste of money, study claims first appeared on
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