Dysmorphopsia

Dysmorphopsia, in a broad sense, is a condition which causes the person affected to be unable to correctly perceive objects. It is a visual distortion, used to denote a variant of metamorphopsia in which lines appear wavy.[1] These illusions may be restricted to certain visuals areas, or may affect the entire visual field.[2]

It has been associated with meningioma tumors[3] and bilateral lateral occipital corital damage, e.g. after carbon monoxide poisoning or drug abuse.[4]

Etymology

The term dysmorphopsia comes from the Greek words dus (bad), morphè (form), and opsis (seeing).[5]

Further reading

A Dictionary of Hallucinations

A neurological disorder presumably underlies painter Francis Bacon distorted world depiction

Dysmorphopsia: a notable variant of the "thin man" phenomenon?

Dysmorphopsia major problem after IOL implantation

See also

Occipital lobe

Metamorphopsia

Hallucination

Visual perception

Macropsia

Micropsia

References

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