Baro-Hyperacuity
Coined by Shawn Potter – January 30, 2026
Definition
Baro-hyperacuity (noun): The heightened conscious perception of micro-pressure changes in the surrounding environment, detected primarily through the auditory system, often accompanied by amplification of baseline neural noise (tinnitus) and directional awareness of the pressure source.
Etymology
- Baro- — from Greek baros (weight, pressure)
- Hyperacuity — heightened perceptual sensitivity beyond typical thresholds
Subjective Experience (Shawn’s Account)
- Feels like pressure on the eardrums
- Everything gets louder, including tinnitus
- Slight tapping sound in the ears accompanies the pressure sensation
- Irregular, not rhythmic
- Follows the level of sound/pressure fluctuation
- Likely the tensor tympani or stapedius muscles adjusting eardrum tension in real-time
- Most people’s brains filter out this sound; Shawn hears the mechanism itself
- The more pressure change, the louder the sensation
- Can be triggered by:
- Wind movement in a room
- A cat walking down a carpeted hallway
- Any air displacement from movement or doors
- When busy, not noticed—executive function filters it out
- When sitting quietly, sensory gain increases dramatically
- Directional: can feel which side is affected, triangulating the source
Mechanism (Theoretical)
The eardrums function as environmental motion sensors, detecting air displacement caused by:
- Movement of bodies
- Opening/closing doors
- Animals moving through space
- HVAC or airflow changes
The brain processes this as threat-detection input. In neurotypical individuals, this is filtered below conscious awareness. In individuals with sensory hyperreactivity (common in autism), the filter threshold is lower and the gain is higher—resulting in conscious perception of what others experience only subconsciously.
The tinnitus amplification occurs because the nervous system, entering heightened sensory mode, increases gain across all auditory processing—including baseline neural noise.
Clinical Context
Falls under broader categories of:
- Sensory hyperreactivity (DSM-5 autism criteria)
- Enhanced perceptual functioning (autism research literature)
- Auditory hyperacuity
- Hypervigilance (threat-detection system)
However, no existing clinical term specifically describes this phenomenon of conscious micro-pressure detection via the auditory system.
Baro-hyperacuity fills that gap.
Potential Applications
- Autism documentation: Concrete example of sensory experience that exists but lacks language because neurotypicals don’t consciously access it
- “What Autism Actually Is” content: Demonstrates how autistic sensory experience isn’t “broken”—it’s heightened detection that serves a function
- Personal validation: Naming the experience confirms it is real, not imagined
- Clinical/research contribution: May help others identify and articulate similar experiences
Notes
This is not a disorder. It is a sensory feature.
The exhaustion comes not from the sense itself, but from living in environments with constant stimulation that cannot be filtered out.
In quiet environments, it functions as a legitimate detection system—awareness of surroundings that most people lack.
© 2026 Shawn Potter. All rights reserved.