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strabismus

n. any chronic abnormal alignment of the eyes, making normal binocular fixation and thus binocular vision impossible. Because strabismic eyes look in different directions, they give the brain conflicting messages, which may result in double vision. Alternatively, the brain may simply ignore, or suppress, one eye’s view altogether. The most common form of strabismus occurs horizontally: One or both eyes deviate inward (convergent strabismus, see cross-eye) or outward (divergent strabismus). However, the deviation may be upward (hypertropia), downward (hypotropia), or in rare cases, twisted clockwise or counterclockwise (cyclotropia). Also called heterotropia; squint. —strabismic adj.

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Psychology term of the day

February 1st 2025

consistent missing

consistent missing

in parapsychology experiments using Zener cards or similar targets, the phenomenon in which a participant’s “calls,” or guesses, are consistently wrong or significantly below chance expectations. Some people attribute such systematic failure to processing error or a conscious or nonconscious reluctance to confirm psychic ability. See also psi-missing.