selaphobia

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English[edit]

Noun[edit]

selaphobia (uncountable)

  1. (rare, medicine) Fear or intolerance of flashes of light.
    • 1985, Robert Peters, The Peters Second Black and Blue Guide to Current Literary Journals[1], →ISBN, page 102:
      Perhaps this explains so much of the monotony. Henri LePont sits in his "barber's chair / of worry and denial" and writes of "Selaphobia," a fear of light flashes.
    • 2013 October, Michael Buzzelli, “Oh, don't be such a phobe”, in Equal Magazine:
      Ever want to approach that hot guy or gal from cross the bar but you were too afraid? You might have Kakorrhaphiophobia, the fear of failure and rejection. If you find a disco ball at the dance club frightening, you might have Selaphobia, the fear of flashing light.
    • 2013, Yun Feng, Yang Li, and Wei Wang, Reduced wavefront aberration influence the visual function after the senile cataract surgery with an aspherical intraocular lens[2], →ISBN, abstract:
      [] many patients complain about the syndrome and side-effects associated with the surgery, such as dizzying, selaphobia, lowered contrast sensitivity, blurred vision in dark environment etc.

References[edit]