sensesaving
Sense-saving is a term used to describe practices and interventions aimed at preserving or optimizing the function of the human senses and reducing exposure to disruptive or harmful sensory input. The scope includes vision, hearing, touch, taste, smell, and the brain's processing of sensory information.
The term has appeared in design discourse, healthcare, and education to describe preventive and restorative aims
In environmental and product design, sense-saving favors reducing sensory load through features such as glare-free lighting,
In digital interfaces, it emphasizes accessibility and predictability—clear contrast, legible typography, simple navigation, and feedback that
In clinical settings, sense-saving may involve protective strategies to preserve sensory function during treatment, sensory rehabilitation
In education and workplace contexts, sense-saving supports individuals with heightened sensory sensitivity or processing differences by
The term remains informal, and practitioners often aligns it with related concepts such as sensory processing,
Critics note that sense-saving can be diffuse and context-dependent, lacking a single operational definition or universal