this post was submitted on 04 Feb 2026
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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

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[–] glimse@lemmy.world 13 points 1 day ago (2 children)

I went 30 years thinking "mental images" were just a turn of phrase. Had no idea people were actually visualizing stuff like that.

I had a bit of a mental breakdown once because of it. Everyone knows their partner's eye color, right? How can I be in love with her if I can't see them when I close my eyes?

But I'm as good at audiating sound as I am bad at visualizing imagery. I can usually play back any isolated instrument in a song and can recognize a voice I haven't heard in 20 years. But if you leave the room and ask me what color shirt you were wearing, I wouldn't be able to tell you.

[–] PlungeButter@lemmy.world 6 points 20 hours ago (1 children)

Thanks for sharing, I'm tremendously intrigued by this. I really can't imagine your experience.

When think of a song I like, I almost automatically "hear" it in my mind. It doesn't interfere with my actual ears, it's kind of on a separate plane of existence. Other noises in the real world can be distracting but I can (with a little effort) ignore one and focus on the other. Are we on the same page here?

With visual stuff it's exactly the same. If I think about a person I know, I immediately see their face. Not with my eyes, but on a separate plane again. It doesn't interfere with what my eyes are seeing but can require some concentration to focus on details. My internal monologue might say their name or I'll hear something they once said to me, and I'll experience certain emotions depending on the person. What happens when you think about a person?

[–] glimse@lemmy.world 2 points 5 hours ago

Kind of. Mostly. I "hear" it in my head and it's very clearly not an external aound. And it doesn't....make sound. My completely unscientific explanation is that the part of my brain that is supposed to visualize stuff is repurposed. It's like synaesthesia, I FEEL the sound waves. But it's not at all similar to how music can elicit emotions.

I was moreso alluding to breaking the song apart into separate instruments in my head in the same way one might be able to think of a person and focus on, say, their eyes alone. This isn't super accurate but if I had to compare it to something visual, picture it like a project file for a song. Every single instrument has its own track and mix and mute as needed......that only explains the melody and rhythm, I "feel" the tone, too, but I can't think of how to describe it.

It's like an speaker in ferrofluid. The tracks have a "shape" for its tone that changes. I feel crazy trying to explain this lol

[–] CombatWombatEsq@lemmy.world 3 points 1 day ago (1 children)

I had this same experience. I was baffled when I discovered that when people say “picture this,” they actually see a picture.

[–] glimse@lemmy.world 2 points 1 day ago

Sophia Petrillo always said that as part of a gag so I assumed it just meant reminiscing