"Inverted colors" mode is indispensable, but bright white text against a
black background is hard to read. White light leaves a bright positive
afterimage on your retina for nearly a second, which means you have
character afterimages following your eye around as it moves, creating a
great deal of visual noise as old text is superimposed over desired text.
This visual noise disrupts the desired character image, making text less
readable.

Black text on a white background does not have this problem since it takes
a long time to adjust to darkness, and it does not leave a lasting
impression. If it did, every blink would have a significant negative effect
on your overall vision, similarly to if a bright light were flashed into
your entire field of vision. Light causes an immediate adjustment and
intense residual afterimage. A broad white background tends to fairly
evenly excite all retinal cells within a large region, and the black
letters cannot overcome its influence enough to leave significant positive
afterimages. This does not interfere with character recognition because it
simply affects the brightness of an entire region rather than introducing
random noise.

Many inversion tools, such as the Deluminate Chrome extension, have a "low
contrast" feature. For those of you who code against dark backgrounds, I'm
sure most of you, like myself, don't use a totally black background with
bright white text. More common is a grey or slate blue background with
light but not bright white text. Whether the developers of these color
schemes realize it or not, this precedent exists precisely for the reason I
am describing. The reduction in contrast reduces the letter afterimage
duration, causing a significant reduction in visual noise and character
disruption.

Adding a low contrast feature to Evince to be used with "inverted colors"
mode will improve text readability.
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