Visual acuity suppression

Revision as of 23:47, 7 February 2018 by >Josikins (revisiting effect overhauls and proofreading/adding minor tweaks)

Acuity suppression can be described as the experience of a person's sense of vision becoming partially to completely blurred and indistinct. This effect may affect the entirety of the person's vision or specific sections of it. Depending on its intensity, this can often result in a reduced ability to function and perform basic tasks which necessitate the use of sight.

Blurred vision

Acuity suppression is often accompanied by other coinciding effects such as double vision and pattern recognition suppression. This effect is most commonly induced under the influence of moderate dosages of depressant and dissociative compounds, such as alcohol, quetiapine, ketamine, and DXM.

Psychoactive substances

Compounds within our psychoactive substance index which may cause this effect include:

... further results

Experience reports

Anecdotal reports which describe this effect within our experience index include:

See also