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Noun

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missing time

  1. (psychology, parapsychology, ufology) A time period of amnesia or a gap in conscious memory reported by individuals who have experienced alien abduction.
    • 1978, Brad Steiger, Alien Meetings, page 168:
      The report of abduction, the memory loss, the missing time, and the shape of the UFO are all familiar to UFO investigators, for this is not an isolated episode.
    • 1984, John Rimmer, The Evidence for Alien Abductions, page 45:
      We have already seen how the victims of UFO abductions seem to have 'missing time' - sometimes they have no memories of several hours of their lives.
    • 1991, David Allen Lewis, UFO: End-Time Delusion:
      There were two to three hours of missing time in their return trip for which neither of them could account.
    • 1996, Angela Hague, David Lavery, Marla Cartwright (editors), Deny All Knowledge, Reading the X-Files, page 8:
      Hopkins describes "missing time" as a time lapse of approximately two hours, after which the abductee can consciously remember little or nothing of the experience.
    • 1999, Chris A. Rutkowski, Abductions and Aliens - What's Really Going On, page 153:
      While Johnson doesn't display many of the indications of alien abduction, he does have a period of missing time which can be absolutely verified, unlike most abductees' cases.
    • 2018, Nick Redfern, Top Secret Alien Abduction Files, What the Government Doesn't Want You to Know, page 127:
      According to Zerbe, while he and his team were out at the crash site, they experienced a period of what in alien abduction terminology has become known as missing time.
  2. (business, management) An operational metric which measures the total amount of time on a timeclock that is unassigned to any task, whether productive or not.
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