• @[email protected]
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    1 month ago

    I’ve always suspected my wife has this, and I just inquired. She said she can’t picture faces or things, but can recognize them. Her memories are more like feelings. I asked if she were separated from our daughter in an apocalypse, if she could remember what she looked like. She said, “I have no idea what she looks like right now.”

    Now she’s in kind of a dark place.

    • @[email protected]
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      I can’t imagine my families faces, and I prob couldn’t even manage a photofit of my own face to be fair. Its strange when you first realise this isn’t standard for most people and its actually a thing.

      Put photos in a necklace for your wife or something similar if it bothers her.

      • TheHarpyEagle
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        21 month ago

        That would actually be a really thoughtful gift, OP should do that.

        It’s hard to imagine… not imagining images. It’s such a weird perspective to think about.

    • @[email protected]
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      31 month ago

      This matches my experience. Everything and everyone has a feeling, not so much a word, or an image, or a number, but a simple to recall, and hard to explain feeling.

      If she’s still in that dark place, ask her whether she can recall what your daughter’s “feeling” in her head. If she’s anything like myself, that feeling is the sum of her relationship with your daughter all in an instant. Not only is that something you probably can’t do that she can, it is an interesting way to perceive others. It helps a lot with code switching too, that same feeling of someone else also sets the tone with which you can effectively communicate with them in my experience, though it doesn’t work on everyone.

    • @[email protected]
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      21 month ago

      This is the level that I am at and it’s hard to explain to people that, “no, I don’t remember so-and-so’s smile on their birthday.” Like the feeling of the experiences are there and an analytical capture is, but vision? Gone the second I don’t see it anymore

  • @andxz
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    361 month ago

    I was a decently rated chess player (nationally) in my youth and I have level 5 aphantasia i.e. I see nothing at all.

    While I absolutely cannot play or picture game states without a physical board in front of me like most pros can, I had no great difficulty otherwise.

    I practiced with a friend at the same general skill level that was very good at playing sans voir, which incidentally is how I realized I don’t have the same mental imagery as him. This was ~25 years ago, and I didn’t run into the word aphantasia until around 2020.

    • @Jayb151
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      21 month ago

      Wait, how do you get ranked for aphantasia? I did sure have it but have never had a name for it

      • @andxz
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        11 month ago

        As I understand it it’s simply differing amounts of realism in one’s recall.

        I did discuss it briefly with my physician but he more or less shrugged it away as a novelty that can’t be helped. He showed me the chart on Wikipedia and mentioned the lack of information about it in general but also that there might be some overlap with autism.

        I have a feeling that it’ll be a while before it can be adequately explained.

  • @[email protected]
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    281 month ago

    Aphantasia is a condition that prevents people from creating mental imagery . It is rare, affecting only about 4% of the global population… My visual memory is like looking through a frosted window. I see some colors and blobby shape and that’s about it.

    • @[email protected]
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      231 month ago

      4% is a pretty big chunk of the population. That’s 1 in every 25 people. Which makes it all the more insane that nobody realised it existed as a condition until just a few years ago.

      • @[email protected]
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        121 month ago

        It just doesn’t come up all that much. Folks live without knowing they are different.

        And it is on a spectrum. Some folks is nothing others are can force a few pictures if they have to but aren’t clear. I dunno.

        • @Feathercrown
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          It just doesn’t come up all that much. Folks live without knowing they are different.

          Case in point: The much easier to explain condition of colorblindness, which takes some people many years to find out they have!

      • @[email protected]
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        1 month ago

        It really depends on how you define aphantasia. Often the VVIQ score is used, a vividness score ranging from 16 to 80.

        About 0,8 % of people have a score of 16, and 3,9 % have a score <= 32. The figures are from one of the more recent studies. Other studies report similar figures, for example one study by Zeman found 0,7 % with a score of 16.

        About ¼ of all people with visual aphantasia also have multisensory aphantasia (all classical senses and emotions).

    • @arin
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      71 month ago

      I don’t see things in my head, it’s still blank but i can imagine the concepts. Do i have aphantasia? My dreams are vivid tho

      • @[email protected]
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        51 month ago

        Probably! Aphantasia isn’t binary, it’s a spectrum. And like you, I can dream, I just can’t visualise stuff in my head while awake.

    • ivy
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      Aphantasia is not actually a real condition btw, the whole “imagine an apple” discourse is completely lacking in rigor. It’s like the online ADHD discourse, or MENSA. It’s a way for boring people to talk about themselves to each other. (Like most of Reddit and Wikipedia.)

        • ivy
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          -221 month ago

          No, everyone can imagine an apple. This is stupid. Even this guy admitted he can remember things, he’s just not satisfied with the quality. A cup of coffee would make him see an apple.

          • @force
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            Lol wtf are you on about. It’s realistic to you that people can have PTSD, hyperphantasia, photographic memory, schizophrenia, bipolar, blindness/deafness, multiple sclerosis, and all these other otherworldy experiences which most people wouldn’t believe without being educated on it, but not realistic that a portion of people have deficient or non-existent mental imagery? Or even that a portion of people have ADHD?

            I seriously doubt that you know better than neuroscience&psychology researchers and people who have the disorder but alright.

            Also aphantasia isn’t “no remember thingies”. Memory is complex and it isn’t reliant on your ability to project images into your vision.

            I have never been able to actually mentally visualize something, I always thought “imagine being in your happy place” was a metaphor and not that you’re actually supposed to visualize a place. I have always took “visualize” to mean not literally putting it in your vision, but just thinking about the fact of a situation. The closest I have to actually being able to picture an image/object is dreams and sleep paralysis hallucinations lol. No amount of caffeine or concerta could possibly change that. You’re crazy if you think because you can’t imagine it that there’s a conspiracy of “so-called aphantasiacs and medical researchers” who are lying about the existence of lacking mental imagery.

            I’m curious as to where you allegedly saw aphantasia being “debunked” because all there seems to be is crazies on internet forums (specifically, Reddit and ycombinator) who notably aren’t psychology researchers, have no qualifications regarding the matter, and are just random people who want to feel like they cracked the code. Often times it’s people who have never been able to visualize who think their deficiency of mental imagery is the norm and that most other people have never been able to visualize either.

            I’m also curious as to whether you think developmental/congenital prosopagnosia is fake or if it’s just a phase like you think aphantasia is.

            • ivy
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              -151 month ago

              “Neuroscience researchers” but you don’t post a source, just an essay on how invested you are in this being real. Keep huffing that Quanta magazine, buddy. MBTI testing is also horseshit. I didn’t see it “debunked” on Hacker News and Reddit, those are the #1 aphantasia and ADHD havers in the entire world. It’s hilarious you think something less rigorous than IQ testing is on the same level as PTSD

              • @force
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                “Neuroscience researchers” but you don’t post a source, just an essay on how invested you are in this being real.

                One

                Two

                Three

                These are by Rebecca Keogh (and others), an actual cognitive neuroscience specialist/psychology researcher who has a PhD from one of the most well-regarded universities in Australia. Here they establish that there is real evidence that aphantasiacs lack mental imagery, and finds that there is no evidence backing the claim that “aphantasiacs have mental imagery”. Keogh also has some works that delve deeper into mental imagery and how it’s a spectrum, including aphantasiacs and hyperphantasiacs.

                Paper by Liana Palermo, PhD in cognitive neuroscience and specialist in mental imagery research, who very bluntly accepts the existence of multiple types of aphantasia & hyperphantasia

                This paper by CJ Dance addresses the prevalence of aphantasia and how it is, again, a spectrum, and discredits the idea that it isn’t simply an impairment in metacognition, rather it is an isolated deficit in visual imagery.

                Here’s a paper involving MANY medical, psychology, and neuroscience researchers which goes over aphantasia and hyperphantasia research, and has many citations to papers that affirm the existence of aphantasia.

                A paper by a STEM/IM researcher finding evidence for deficits in mathematic visualization in aphantasiacs.

                Paolo Bartolomeo is a highly accreddited neurologist & researcher, and Jianghao Liu is a cognitive neuroscience researcher (PhD) with specialization in visual mental imagery and consciousness. The paper clearly states the existence of a disorder causing absent or nearly absent visual imagery called aphantasia.

                Here’s Cleveland Clinic casually affirming its existence too.

                I shouldn’t even have to give sources because I’m not the one claiming an abnormality in visual imagery is fake but here you go anyways.

                It literally comes up immediately when you search for aphantasia research. You clearly have not even tried to find research on aphantasia. Now where are your sources? I notice you didn’t link any, at all.

                MBTI testing is also horseshit.

                ??? Where in the god damn fuck did I mention MBTI or personality tests in general in my original comment?

                I didn’t see it “debunked” on Hacker News and Reddit, those are the #1 aphantasia and ADHD havers in the entire world.

                And yet you don’t mention where you “saw it debunked”, just stating that you totally did bro.

                It’s hilarious you think something less rigorous than IQ testing is on the same level as PTSD

                Again, you are being crazy, you are quite literally making up arguments to attack out of your ass.

                I don’t know why you decided this is the hill for you to die on despite you clearly having no idea of what you’re talking about and most respected psychology & neuroscience/cognition researchers who have tackled the subject clearly not being aligned with your views on the matter at all, and what makes you think you have any authority to just call a scientifically measured and agreed-to -exist phenomenon fake, but go ahead and have a tantrum and pretend you know anything about the subject I guess.

                If you respond with internet magazines or a shitty YouTube video essay as your source I’m gonna laugh myself to asphyxiation

                • @[email protected]
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                  41 month ago

                  Does Aphantasia also cause the development of superhuman levels of patience? Because my dude, i don’t know how you managed to entertain this troll for as long as you have. This whole thread was highly entertaining though, so thanks for that, lol.

                  (I know it goes deeper but i didn’t want to bury my comment that far down)

                • ivy
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                  Psychology Today has done a number on you, what a frantically googling moron, the first study has N=15, it’s entirely based on self-diagnosis and surveys. They want to come up with a neurological basis for it based off fifteen people self-reporting fuck off lmfao.

                  Oh wow she has a PHD??? We have to listen to her obviously. I hate pseuds and their credentialism hahahaha you’re full of it

                  Can’t wait to see the second one.

                  This is like when my sister decided she was a super taster and that cilantro tastes like soap.

                  I never said I was particularly impressed with the rigor of ALL NEUROSCIENTISTS, they are as bad as physicists involved with string theory. Unfalsifiable nonsense. This is the kind of shit I’m talking about when I trash the entire field of “smart science” that’s been picked up by TPOT and Lesswrong and other pseuds.

                  saw it debunked

                  Oh you want me to prove aphantasia isn’t real lol, no wonder you have trouble with things like this where people play word games, you’re completely devoid of logic. The onus is on you, and neuroscientists, to prove it exists.

                  What you did is go pull every paper you could possibly find which reinforces your identity.

                • ivy
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                  -111 month ago

                  This is the problem with the I Fucking Love Science crowd, your fun facts quickly turn into barrages of narcissistic gibberish whenever someone doesn’t give you validation. There’s no rigor, there’s no questioning, there’s no meta-analysis.

                  Just TRUST THE SCIENTISTS, LOOK AT THE STUDIESESS nevermind whether they’re any good. Go post about the Stanford Prison Experiment or something you irritating pseud.

                • ivy
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                  -121 month ago

                  If there is anything keeping people from having solid visualizations throughout the day, it’s not sleeping enough. It’s a night-and day difference in mental imagery. None of these studies control for anything like that or sleep, which really just shows you how hard they are fishing for something which isn’t there. A lot of sleep issues are totally incurable without switching to back sleeping, getting rid of lint (people refuse to do this), and eliminating a sedentary lifestyle. Now if you tried to do studies on people like that you wouldn’t be able to find any. But I can tell you I’ve experienced “aphantasia” and it’s cured by getting a good night’s sleep. A lot of people never get a good night’s sleep ever.

    • ivy
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      -361 month ago

      This happens to me periodically and I seriously think it means we just need more potassium, less sleep disruption, and more time in nature to absorb green colors (soothing in memory, gives you good dreams) and exercise the eye muscles with long distance focus.

      • @MutilationWave
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        121 month ago

        Absorb green colors haha. How many crystals should I carry while I do the absorption?

        • ivy
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          -91 month ago

          You do realize that when people are confined entirely to urban spaces they report having anxiety dreams about interior spaces?

        • ivy
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          -111 month ago

          Are you sheltered or something? Looking at verdant green spaces has been proven to have a positive psychological effect. You should wear crystals over your eyes if you are nearsighted to help. 👓 Aphantasia is just a difference in language games people use. It’s been debunked.

    • ivy
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      -411 month ago

      Downvoted for telling you how to dream more, stay salty!

  • @[email protected]
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    A friend of mine has aphantasia. It seems like she has trouble with some board games but not with others. If she can stare st the layout of the board she’s usually fine. We’ve never played chess.

    In addition to not being able to see anything in her head, she also cannot hear her own thoughts.

    • The Picard ManeuverOP
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      61 month ago

      That last part is particularly interesting… So maybe it’s not just visual reasoning.

    • @Zannsolo
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      41 month ago

      She’s like the Helen Keller of thinking

  • @[email protected]
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    161 month ago

    Well I don’t play chess in my head. That doesn’t stop me from being a reasonably decent chess player when there’s a physical board in front of me. I’m not sure why aphantasia would be considered relevant to chess?

    • The Picard ManeuverOP
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      111 month ago

      Do you have it? I’m just curious how someone would plan multiple moves ahead without an image of changes to the board in their head.

      “Well, if I move the bishop here, then it’s pinning the knight to the king. Then I can capture over here, threatening a fork.” etc.

      • @[email protected]
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        141 month ago

        I do. Feel free to ask further if you have more questions.

        Basically, when I’m playing, and trying to look multiple moves ahead, at least for me it’s like a logic tree. Exactly like what you described. I just don’t visualise any images. To me, I’ll keep track that the bishop will be on this spot, this spot will be empty, etc etc. I just need memory for that, it doesn’t involve any imagery.

        • The Picard ManeuverOP
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          61 month ago

          That’s fascinating. What about controlled squares? Like, visualizing the cross-shaped lines extending from a bishop? Or the asterisk-shaped lines extending from the queen?

          In my head, I sort of “highlight” them like this:

          • @humorlessrepost
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            71 month ago

            Same thing, but with knowledge instead of colors. Like how you can (I assume) know your birthday without visualizing a calendar.

            • The Picard ManeuverOP
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              51 month ago

              It’s funny that you mention it, because while I would of course “know” a date, any time I read one I always visualize a calendar at the same time.

            • @TootSweet
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              Wow. That’s wild. I suspect a lot of folks here without aphantasia are wondering what it even means to “know” something without being able to see (or hear/smell/taste/feel/whatever) it in your head.

              I guess I “know my birthday” by virtue of the fact that I hear the words “August 17th” (not my real birthday, but yeah) in my head when I casually wonder what my birthday is.

              If I know my birthday is on a Wednesday this year, I can picture a calendar page with the middle square of the third row “highlighted” like The Picard Maneuver was talking about with controlled squares above.

              For me, I’m not sure I can imagine “knowing” something without either hearing or seeing (or otherwise sensing via some anlogue of the 5 senses) it in some sense in my head.

              • @humorlessrepost
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                If I ask you your birthday, I’d expect you to hear “August 17th” in your inner voice before answering. But if I asked you “is your birthday January 3?” would you have to mentally say your birthday before answering “no”? I’d assume not.

                My inner voice is used almost exclusively for forming sentences before speaking or typing them. If I’m alone, not thinking of conversations, and not reading, there’s rarely anything there except maybe a song stuck in my head. My inner voice isn’t constantly there saying “let’s go switch over the laundry” and stuff.

                • @[email protected]
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                  11 month ago

                  Folks with aphantasia are also more likely to lack an inner voice.

                  I wouldn’t say my birthday in my head before responding. My inner voice isn’t so different from yours, except being in a conversation mine is silent. With typing as well mine isn’t always present. Typing on my phone I have to think the word to swipe it, but on a keyboard I sometimes just type.

              • @[email protected]
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                11 month ago

                I guess I “know my birthday” by virtue of the fact that I hear the words “August 17th” (not my real birthday, but yeah) in my head when I casually wonder what my birthday is.

                That would describe my experience. Aphantasia only affects the ability to visualise something, not the mental voice that I believe everybody has.

          • @[email protected]
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            51 month ago

            Pretty much. I don’t visualise it with pretty colors, but I can look at the board and see their lines of control. I feel like you’re imagining aphantasia to be a lot more limiting than it actually is?

            • The Picard ManeuverOP
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              41 month ago

              Maybe so then. In my mind, “seeing” the line that’s not there would count as visualizing.

              • @[email protected]
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                61 month ago

                Well you might be seeing an actual line. I’m mentally tagging the squares in that line as ‘line of control’. It’s like seeing somebody point a finger at something. I don’t need to visualise an actual line coming from their fingertip to be able to judge where they’re pointing at. It’s more a spatial thing than visualising an image.

                IDK, it’s tough explaining how brains and thought processes work. They just… are.

                • The Picard ManeuverOP
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                  41 month ago

                  This is why I’m always interested in talking to people about aphantasia. It’s like 2 people trying our best to describe colors to each other and wondering “are we talking about the same thing…?” the whole time.

        • @[email protected]
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          31 month ago

          Not an avid chess player, but as someone with aphantasia pretty much spot on for my experience.

  • @[email protected]
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    I have a middling case of aphantasia. I can create a basic image, blurry shapes, low detail, etc. with a lot of focus and concentration. I struggle immensely with faces I haven’t seen a lot, and spatial orientation. Beyond that, I simply think in terms of words more than images.

    As far as chess, this means I’m logically thinking out the moves, rather than mentally picturing it. I tend to get a bit overwheled trying to internalize the new board state after more than a couple of moves. I also don’t play chess much, though, and would probably simply train that ability by playing more, just like someone without aphantasia will train visualizing more board shapes ahead.

    • @ResidentCoffeeCat
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      41 month ago

      I just wanted to say I’m almost exactly the same way, and it’s kinda cool to see someone else stuck in this halfway point, lol. The way I describe it is that I can picture the concept of something in my head, but the moment I try to focus on any details, it gets warped or corrupted or simply won’t manifest any more detail. Same on struggling with faces/remembering people, not so much on spatial orientation.

      While I haven’t played chess in a long while, I can kinda draw off my experience with similar games and logic problems I’ve worked on. I can kinda hold the concepts in my head, but not really visualize it. So I’ll not be envisioning the chess board, but I can still easily puzzle out “if I take this pawn, that one will take my rook, then I can take it with my knight”, etc.

      • @[email protected]
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        11 month ago

        Yeah, pretty much the exact same thing for me. I describe things as, I can get a single detail to pop, but then I lose the overall composition, and when I scale back to the whole image, it’s a different image.

      • KillingTimeItself
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        1 month ago

        god yeah, i have aphantasia, but i also dream, so i often experience these unquantifiable dreams, which often bleed into reality, because my brain has never experienced anything other than “physically observing the world” so anytime i dream half the time my brain is just confused as fuck and considers it to be a real event that actually happened, because fuck it why not.

        That has been the source of confusion more times than i’d like to admit. My more wacky and obviously not real dreams help a lot with that though.

        it’s weird as fuck waking up, and having no mechanism to recall something that “happened” you have this like, weird fleeting state of emotion and vague comprehension of what happened. But no way to visually process it.

  • @Randelung
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    151 month ago

    You have an abstract concept of the board in your head. The logical connections are still there, there’s just no image of a chess board that represents the moves. Basically the same way a computer thinks without images, too.

    • experbia
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      31 month ago

      this was always my take on this discussion as well.

      i think this whole phenomena is more or less a communication misunderstanding and a matter of semantics. I believe that the people who report not being able to “see the apple” are people more inherently capable of more introspection and other metacognitive tasks. they identify correctly that the “mind’s eye” is basically the brain imagining what sensations of vision a particular thing might elicit, the same way we might imagine the sensations of touching something fuzzy or imagine the sensations of tasting something bitter. I think very few minds can “project” visual imagination of an apple before the imaginer as thoroughly indistinguishabley as if you got real sensory input of an apple.

      i think that people who claim to really see the apple are taking the imaginary sensation of vision as equivalent to the sensation of vision generated from real sensory input, and therefore presuming that it counts as actually seeing it. and those who claim not to see the apple are likely just noticing the difference and assuming they’re lacking because the imaginary sensations and actual the sensory stimulus are clearly different things.

      we have a word for when people actually see things they cannot ordinarily distinguish from reality, even if they’re aware of them as such: hallucinations.

      • @Feathercrown
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        11 month ago

        This is a good theory but it doesn’t really match the actual data. Aphantasia is a real thing-- some people cannot create mental images. A good test for this is the “Visualize an apple… what color was it?” test. You are right that language is a major barrier to describing your internal experience, and this likely causes a lot of false positives and negatives, but there are ways to get around that. Also, I’ve never heard of someone actually confuse mental imagery for a true visual stimulus, and misrepresenting mental visualization in that way is… strange, at minimum.

        • @Ultraviolet
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          31 month ago

          While that’s true, the apple test is terribly communicated. The middle stages of the visualization spectrum between no imagery and hyperphantasia are very easily misinterpreted. No one sees a blurry, washed out apple, the details just need to be in conscious focus to be present.

  • @Matriks404
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    131 month ago

    I have trouble visualizing faces in my mind. The more I focus on “seeing” somebody’s face the less accurate it is.

      • @[email protected]
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        21 month ago

        Hypoanphantasia is a thing, it means small anphatasia or rather very weak phantasia. The characteristic is a spectrum, not distinct categories. Very few people see nothing but also very few people see the chess board or faces in great detail.

  • @[email protected]
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    121 month ago

    It’s funny, people make aphantasia out to be a huge disability but ironically that just feels like a lack of imagination on their part. The things where you actually need to see images instead of just abstract thinking are pretty rare.

    • KillingTimeItself
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      31 month ago

      it’s not a significant disability frankly, that’s part of the reason it’s only just now received a lot of study. It’s more of a dysfunction than anything.

      It is fundamentally a lack of imagination, we cannot imagine things, it’s impossible. Ironically, it’s quite helpful to some individuals, me in particular i really enjoy any sort of complex stated systems. I can really latch onto those and comprehend them pretty well. I can do artistic things for about fuck all though.

        • KillingTimeItself
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          11 month ago

          yeah, but a large part of imagination is being able to visualize something in your imagination. Otherwise doing things like 2 + 2 in your head would count as imagination.

          Also technically, not visual/sensory imagery, just the ability to visualize things in your mind. But that’s semantics so meh.

  • @Lifecoach5000
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    101 month ago

    I have this and have often wondered if it works against me. I have also been weirded out that it’s normal for people to actually “see” pictures in their head ever since I found out about this.

    Anyways yes. This must be why I am not great at chess. Let’s blame it!

    • @[email protected]
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      21 month ago

      I now have a mental picture of you sitting at a chess board straining to visualize it in your head and losing. At least you are spreading imagery to others.

  • @mhague
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    101 month ago

    What does it mean to visualize a chess position?

    I don’t exactly “render” the board or pieces. It’s like when you look at a board, and then make connections and feel whatever you feel, I just recreate those things.

    I assume it’s similar to other people, but the phrase “not being able to create images” sounds like people do “render” things in their head.

    • The Picard ManeuverOP
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      91 month ago

      It’s not the same as seeing it visually, but yeah I’d say it’s a mental “render”. Sort of like how having a song stuck in your head isn’t the same as actually hearing it.

      You move the pieces around in your mental picture of the board to reassess what the potential position would look like.

      • @De_Narm
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        101 month ago

        That’s so far removed from how my brain actually works, it might as well be magic. I simply stare at the board and make mental notes which spaces would have which pieces, but there’s nothing visual to it. Take away the board and I can’t do a thing to plan my next moves.

        For the record, I also never have any songs stuck in my head. When listening to stuff, I can recognize wrong notes and such, but I cannot in any form listen to music in my head. Heck, I can barely hum the tunes of my favorite songs after listening to them hundreds of times.

        • The Picard ManeuverOP
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          51 month ago

          It’s incredible how our brains can accomplish the same things in different ways.

          It’s not like the average player can picture the full board state and play blindfolded chess like some GMs can, but I’d expect that it’s pretty normal to visualize pieces on potential spots for tactics.

          • @[email protected]
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            31 month ago

            I can imagine what the board state would be if my piece is there, I just don’t create a mental picture of it.

    • VaultBoyNewVegas
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      81 month ago

      It’s not the same. Aphantasisa is the total absence of being able able to picture things mentally. I have it to a degree except it takes me some effort to picture things. I can’t imagine scenes from books. I get like a fleeting image.

  • KillingTimeItself
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    71 month ago

    like people who don’t have it? Chess is strategy, not art, or engineering.

    Chess is a series of strategic moves. You just make them. Are yall out here experiencing some kind of bizarre 5d chess i’ve never experienced before?

    source - me, i have it.

  • @[email protected]
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    71 month ago

    I just think about what moves they may make from what I can physically see. It works well enough but I’m not good at chess. That’s most likely my ADHD working against me though not the aphantasia. Maybe both lol.

    • The Picard ManeuverOP
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      51 month ago

      Speaking of ADHD, I’ve been into chess lately and have found it to be a really good way to practice extending my focus and not taking mental shortcuts, like I’m prone to do.

  • @[email protected]
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    41 month ago

    I wonder if there are blind people with aphantasia.

    I feel like the amount would either be close to none, or most of them.

    • KillingTimeItself
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      11 month ago

      most blind people who were born are aphantasic i think? Blind people who became blind often aren’t.

      Don’t quote me on it.