Again, you are discussing two different things.
There is the rate/frequency beyond which human eye sees a sequence of frames as smooth video. That's closer to 30Hz than 240Hz for most people - that's why movies get away with ~24Hz. (Fluorescent lamps and CRT displays require a higher frequency because they go dark(er) in between.)
Then there's the perception of latency. I haven't actually read any scientific literature on the subject. However, simple reaction time is on average somewhere around 200ms, so I doubt <10ms is perceptible. Also, the brain is good at hiding latency, e.g. between visual and auditory data from a distance. 10ms is the time sound lags light after a 3.5m distance.
There is the rate/frequency beyond which human eye sees a sequence of frames as smooth video. That's closer to 30Hz than 240Hz for most people - that's why movies get away with ~24Hz. (Fluorescent lamps and CRT displays require a higher frequency because they go dark(er) in between.)
Then there's the perception of latency. I haven't actually read any scientific literature on the subject. However, simple reaction time is on average somewhere around 200ms, so I doubt <10ms is perceptible. Also, the brain is good at hiding latency, e.g. between visual and auditory data from a distance. 10ms is the time sound lags light after a 3.5m distance.