Think about your breakfast this morning. Can you imagine the pattern on your coffee mug? The sheen of the jam on your half-eaten toast?

Most of us can call up such pictures in our minds. We can visualize the past and summon images of the future. But for an estimated 4% of people, this mental imagery is weak or absent. When researchers ask them to imagine something familiar, they might have a concept of what it is, and words and associations might come to mind, but they describe their mind’s eye as dark or even blank.

… the topic received a surge of attention when, a decade ago, an influential paper coined the term aphantasia to describe the experience of people with no mental imagery.

Much of the early work sought to describe the trait and assess how it affected behaviour. But over the past five years, studies have begun to explore what’s different about the brains of people with this form of inner life. The findings have led to a flurry of discussions about how mental imagery forms, what it is good for and what it might reveal about the puzzle of consciousness: researchers tend to define mental imagery as a conscious experience, and some are now excited to study aphantasia as a way to probe imagery’s potentially unconscious forms.

The article itself went into a lot of past and current research into aphantasia and is quite detailed, worth a read if you are interested (especially if you are also quite high on the aphantasia scale like OP)

Try this archive.org link if it is paywalled

Edit: some of you all should take the Vividness of Visual Imagery Questionnaire (VVID). The article only gave an excerpt, there seem to be a few free ones floating on the internet

  • 🇰 🌀 🇱 🇦 🇳 🇦 🇰 🇮 @pawb.social
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    10 hours ago

    I have a fairly vivid mental imaging system. The only thing that’s of note is that it’s not bright. It’s like seeing the reflection off of tinted glass as night. The image I imagine is transparent and the background is black. Even if I am imagining a backdrop, that backdrop is transparent with black behind it.

    And maybe the fact I see words very clearly labeling those images. Like you say “apple,” I see an apple and the text “Apple” near it.

    • nixon@sh.itjust.works
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      8 hours ago

      Sounds like it could be a form of ticker tape synesthesia with a less vivid variation of hyperphantasia.