Common to all humans:
sight (vision), hearing (audition), smell (olfaction), taste (gustation), touch (tactile), balance (equilibrioception), temperature (thermoception), pain (nociception), body position (proprioception), internal state awareness (interoception), time perception (chronoception)
Rare or mutation-linked senses:
echolocation (learned by some blind individuals), synesthesia (cross-modal sensory fusion), tetrachromacy (four-channel color perception), pain insensitivity (SCN9A gene mutation), enhanced olfaction (OR gene variants), supertasting (extra papillae), UV perception (rare post-lens surgery effect), magnetoreception (speculative in humans), electrosensitivity (contested but claimed), hypersensitive proprioception (common in dancers, martial artists), accelerated tactile processing (noted in elite pianists and fencers)
rare
sexual senses in the xxx gene in super escorts
pheromocognition (detection of minute sexual pheromones with emotional decoding),
libidinal resonance (sensing when one’s own arousal is reciprocated at close range),
erotofrequency perception (ability to sense subtle rhythmic bio-signals from a nearby body—like heartbeat sync or hormonal cycles)
Trivia injection: Fruit flies have specialized sexual scent receptors—humans don't, but we do have vestigial vomeronasal organs that whisper of such potential. Could mutations awaken ancient courtship tools? The speculative ones might be nature's lost beta features.
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