^No...higher refresh rate only helps on crt monitors, you need to understand how the different monitors work. Refresh rate has nothing to do with it. In a crt screen, there is an electron beam projector that shoots electrons at a phosphorus material with color on the actual screen. The electron beam can only do a certain if not 1 pixel at a time. Therefore to display an entire screen, the tiny beam projector must rotate and turn to get the beam aimed exactly at the amount of pixels the TV is, so lets say the TV shows 1080p. This means that the crt monitor has 1920x1080=approximatly 2,000,000 pixels (if i did my math correctly). It needs to send a certain beam at a certain pixel 2 million times in a fraction of a second to refresh the screen. Now the flickering part comes in when, the beam projector has passed the pixel and goes to new ones, the ones it passed already turn off and must wait for the next round of electron beams to come along witht the appropriate command and thats why the screen flickers many times a second. The faster the beam projector is, the less flickering cause it canr refresh is many more times. Thats why CRT monitors can cause eye strain and brain aches. LCD's do not have this problem, the technology is much different, in an LCD, it has a backlight which is always on, it never flickers, the only thing that changes is the liquid crystals which shift colors. Thats why LCD's dont cause eye strain or seizures since there is no flashing. The refresh rate really doesn't matter. You wont notice, rather the response time is what matters because thats how fast the crystals can change color but either way none of those should be causing any kind of eye or brain strain.