English edit

Etymology edit

blind +‎ sight. Coined in a 1974 paper in the Lancet by Sanders et al.[1]

Noun edit

blindsight (uncountable)

  1. The responsivity shown by some blind or partially blind people to visual stimuli of which they are not consciously aware.
    Synonym: agnosopsia
    • 1992, Lawrence Weiskrantz, “Unconscious Vision: The Strange Phenomenon of Blindsight,”, in The Sciences, volume 32, number 5, page 23:
      On more pointed testing Sanders and I, along with the National Hospital psychologist Elizabeth K. Warrington, discovered to our amazement that Daniel's "blind" field was not blind at all in the usual sense. . . . When objects were placed in his blind field, he made virtually no errors locating them, though he could not tell us what they were. . . . "I couldn't see anything, not a darn thing," Daniel told us. All he would allow was a "feeling" about an object in some, but not all, [of] the tests. We named the extraordinary phenomenon blindsight.

Derived terms edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ M. D. Sanders, E. K. Warrington, J. Marshall, and L. Wieskrantz, "‘Blindsight’: Vision in a field defect," Lancet, vol. 1, no. 7860 (20 Apr. 1974), pp. 707-8.