Experimental phenomenology and psychophysics are two rather different approaches to the study of perception, and rely on first-person descriptions and third-person measurements of the percept, respectively. Yet, a common ground may be found in the original goal, shared by both approaches, of addressing the conscious dimension of perception. Here we argue that, despite being objective and quantitatively-oriented, psychophysics can, with some cautions, recover certain simple subjective aspects of conscious perception. Building upon the results of a motion perception experiment, we show how to transform the ratings of subjective visibility into a well-known index of objective discriminability in perceptual decisions (d’). We found that, once a...