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  3. I first saw the word “aphantasia” about a decade ago, and it was clear to me that it’s one of my mental traits, though I did still have questions about some things I can do.

I first saw the word “aphantasia” about a decade ago, and it was clear to me that it’s one of my mental traits, though I did still have questions about some things I can do.

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aphantasia
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  • gannet@sunny.gardenG gannet@sunny.garden

    @woozle I have someone else replying that they have good mental imagery but still has trouble with visualizing fight scenes, so it seems to be unrelated.

    naga@toot.catN This user is from outside of this forum
    naga@toot.catN This user is from outside of this forum
    naga@toot.cat
    wrote last edited by
    #33

    @gannet @woozle If that was me, it's not so much that I can't, as can't be bothered to work at it.

    There's usually too much detail for it to be a more than trivial effort.

    naga@toot.catN 1 Reply Last reply
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    • gannet@sunny.gardenG gannet@sunny.garden

      @woozle I have someone else replying that they have good mental imagery but still has trouble with visualizing fight scenes, so it seems to be unrelated.

      jkcheney@wandering.shopJ This user is from outside of this forum
      jkcheney@wandering.shopJ This user is from outside of this forum
      jkcheney@wandering.shop
      wrote last edited by
      #34

      @gannet @woozle

      I will say that you can have low mental imagery for visuals, but still be able to visualize motion, like blocking a scene in the theater. (What I 'see' in my head is just vague lines, like motion lines in anime). But the spatial visualization is a little different than visualization of items. I can often 'picture' how a person moved, without any picture of what they looked like. Go figure.

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      • gannet@sunny.gardenG gannet@sunny.garden

        Also, reading the article above helped me make a connection about how I prefer to get news about unpleasant subjects. I don’t know how specific this is to people with aphantasia, but when there’s something violent in the news, I am extremely horrified by video, very horrified by audio, and horrified by text descriptions.

        This is the bit from the article that made me wonder if that has any connection to my aphantasia (though I wouldn’t be surprised if everyone had some difference of intensity):

        > A person’s emotional reaction to scary stories, measured by how much they sweat, can be a good proxy for how vividly they imagine what’s happening in the story.

        4/4

        mshearthwitch@wandering.shopM This user is from outside of this forum
        mshearthwitch@wandering.shopM This user is from outside of this forum
        mshearthwitch@wandering.shop
        wrote last edited by
        #35

        @gannet this has me thinking... When I read something horrific and then imagine it I imagine it as a written scene? It's like my brain is writing/narrating a book. My thoughts are often verbal, talking to myself, is that not how most people do it?

        gannet@sunny.gardenG 1 Reply Last reply
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        • naga@toot.catN naga@toot.cat

          @gannet @woozle If that was me, it's not so much that I can't, as can't be bothered to work at it.

          There's usually too much detail for it to be a more than trivial effort.

          naga@toot.catN This user is from outside of this forum
          naga@toot.catN This user is from outside of this forum
          naga@toot.cat
          wrote last edited by
          #36

          @gannet @woozle Oops, saw who it was. Nevermind.

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          • gannet@sunny.gardenG gannet@sunny.garden

            Oh and I’ve always hated the kind of guided meditation that’s all about visualizing soothing imagery. I can remember sitting cross-legged in Girl Scouts with my eyes closed and being told to imagine flying over a green forest under a blue sky. I’m still irritated when I think of that! 😄

            jgarfink@mellified.menJ This user is from outside of this forum
            jgarfink@mellified.menJ This user is from outside of this forum
            jgarfink@mellified.men
            wrote last edited by
            #37

            @gannet i never understood that and i'm sad it took so many years for me to understand why

            gannet@sunny.gardenG 1 Reply Last reply
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            • jgarfink@mellified.menJ jgarfink@mellified.men

              @gannet i never understood that and i'm sad it took so many years for me to understand why

              gannet@sunny.gardenG This user is from outside of this forum
              gannet@sunny.gardenG This user is from outside of this forum
              gannet@sunny.garden
              wrote last edited by
              #38

              @jgarfink me too!

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              • mshearthwitch@wandering.shopM mshearthwitch@wandering.shop

                @gannet this has me thinking... When I read something horrific and then imagine it I imagine it as a written scene? It's like my brain is writing/narrating a book. My thoughts are often verbal, talking to myself, is that not how most people do it?

                gannet@sunny.gardenG This user is from outside of this forum
                gannet@sunny.gardenG This user is from outside of this forum
                gannet@sunny.garden
                wrote last edited by
                #39

                @MsHearthWitch

                I know someone who sees a detailed movie *while reading *.

                Mind boggling.

                mshearthwitch@wandering.shopM 1 Reply Last reply
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                • silhelm@craftgoblin.clubS silhelm@craftgoblin.club

                  @gannet I'm on the other end of whatever spectrum aphantasia is one end of, extremely vivid imagination, and I can't with most books. I am extremely grateful for the Celia Lake recommendation from you about four or five years ago, they rarely make me tense up. I'm also quick thinking and can imagine all the ways something can go wrong, so for instance breaking in to the villain's house/room always terrifies me. Don't doooo iiiiiit

                  gannet@sunny.gardenG This user is from outside of this forum
                  gannet@sunny.gardenG This user is from outside of this forum
                  gannet@sunny.garden
                  wrote last edited by
                  #40

                  @silhelm

                  I’ve seen the opposite end of the spectrum called hyperphantasia, just so you know.

                  Next time I come across a low stress book that’s well written, I’ll try to let you know. I’m so glad that Celia Lake’s books have worked well for you!

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                  • gannet@sunny.gardenG gannet@sunny.garden

                    @MsHearthWitch

                    I know someone who sees a detailed movie *while reading *.

                    Mind boggling.

                    mshearthwitch@wandering.shopM This user is from outside of this forum
                    mshearthwitch@wandering.shopM This user is from outside of this forum
                    mshearthwitch@wandering.shop
                    wrote last edited by
                    #41

                    @gannet I cannot. When I read I just speak the words in my head.

                    I never considered I might have aphantasia because I can pull up memories of images in my head. So like I *can* see a picture? idk. Mostly my head is words.

                    gannet@sunny.gardenG 1 Reply Last reply
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                    • mshearthwitch@wandering.shopM mshearthwitch@wandering.shop

                      @gannet I cannot. When I read I just speak the words in my head.

                      I never considered I might have aphantasia because I can pull up memories of images in my head. So like I *can* see a picture? idk. Mostly my head is words.

                      gannet@sunny.gardenG This user is from outside of this forum
                      gannet@sunny.gardenG This user is from outside of this forum
                      gannet@sunny.garden
                      wrote last edited by
                      #42

                      @MsHearthWitch

                      the thing I take from all this is that the conscious part of brains is even more variable than I would have guessed when I was younger

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                      • emery@sunny.gardenE emery@sunny.garden

                        @mmezabet @gannet For further ADHD anecdata, I can hear entire songs in my head, but I struggle to visualize. I *can*, but it takes conscious effort and the pictures aren't clear or stable.

                        On the other hand, my brother (who also has ADHD) says that when he reads books, he "sees" it in his mind as detailed as if he were watching a movie. His memory of past events is also much more reliable than mine.

                        lyndaljane@bne.socialL This user is from outside of this forum
                        lyndaljane@bne.socialL This user is from outside of this forum
                        lyndaljane@bne.social
                        wrote last edited by
                        #43

                        @emery @mmezabet @gannet more anecdata: have ADHD, very strong mental visualisation to the point where MrJane knows I'm figuring something out because I have "raptor eyes" - apparently they dart around like I'm looking at something in front of me when it's purely in my brainspace.

                        Can't remember faces well, but places/objects stick.

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                        • gannet@sunny.gardenG gannet@sunny.garden

                          For me, it’s not that I have no mental imagery, but that it’s extremely vague when it exists. It is clear that images are stored somewhere in my brain, since I do recognize things and people on sight.

                          I am baffled that I dream in pictures at least some of the time. Maybe because my brain isn’t processing actual visual input?

                          I do have a strong “mind’s ear”, to the point where, if I’ve heard an author’s voice, I might hear them narrating the words when I read one of their books.

                          Anyway, it pleases me to learn that having a “mind’s ear” and visual dreams are things shared by some other aphantasics.

                          Also:

                          > A decade of work has left researchers convinced that aphantasia is a real phenomenon, but many are puzzled by how little it seems to affect behaviour. Behavioural tasks that are thought to depend on mental imagery don’t seem to be a problem for people with aphantasia. They perform relatively well on standard memory assessments and they seem to be able to rotate objects in their mind, to determine whether an object in one picture matches another presented from a different angle.

                          Yep! My feeling is that my brain knows what things look like; it’s just not projecting it in that mysterious location where other people see mental imagery. I mean, what the heck, how can some people both read a book and “see” what’s happening. Where does the imagery appear?

                          2/2

                          liminally_human@mastodon.xyzL This user is from outside of this forum
                          liminally_human@mastodon.xyzL This user is from outside of this forum
                          liminally_human@mastodon.xyz
                          wrote last edited by
                          #44

                          @gannet my experience is similar to yours. I can kind of picture a tiny portion of a described thing in incredibly low detail and without colour (or just the colour and I lose the object). My big exception is that when I catch myself in a cycle of particularly bad catastrophizing or flashbacks, I feel like I'm seeing everything in technicolor. I can't picture things deliberately, but unfortunately some reason that does come through!

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                          • gannet@sunny.gardenG gannet@sunny.garden

                            @jgarfink I had a prolonged conversation with someone online who eventually was convinced that I was describing my reality instead of engaging in a weird prank. She had hyperphantasia and would “see” a detailed movie while reading a book!

                            My mother also has aphantasia.

                            Glad to share.

                            danilaura@mathstodon.xyzD This user is from outside of this forum
                            danilaura@mathstodon.xyzD This user is from outside of this forum
                            danilaura@mathstodon.xyz
                            wrote last edited by
                            #45

                            @gannet @jgarfink my grown-up nephew didn't believe me when I told I had aphantasia in a family dinner.

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                            • gannet@sunny.gardenG gannet@sunny.garden

                              I first saw the word “aphantasia” about a decade ago, and it was clear to me that it’s one of my mental traits, though I did still have questions about some things I can do. This new article sums up the current research and has more specifics about the variations.

                              #aphantasia

                              1/2

                              Link Preview Image
                              Many people don’t see mental images. The reason offers clues to consciousness

                              People with aphantasia have no mental imagery—and they’re offering brain scientists a window into consciousness

                              favicon

                              Scientific American (www.scientificamerican.com)

                              shrike@mementomori.socialS This user is from outside of this forum
                              shrike@mementomori.socialS This user is from outside of this forum
                              shrike@mementomori.social
                              wrote last edited by
                              #46

                              @gannet Check out Aphantasia Network, they've got a lot of stuff going.
                              I've been part of their studies and stuff for... nearly 10 years now. While it doesn't help me as such, it is interesting and can help when explaining it to others.

                              Link Preview Image
                              Aphantasia Network - Understanding the Mind Without Mental Imagery

                              Join the global aphantasia community. Access research, resources, and connect with others who experience the world without mental imagery. Discover tools, studies, and support for aphantasia.

                              favicon

                              Aphantasia Network (aphantasia.com)

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