• Zendegy@lemm.ee
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    6 days ago

    Ha! I posed this query to my daughter just the other day. We are both aphantastic and have no chess abilities at all.

  • andxz@lemmy.world
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    1 year 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@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

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

      • andxz@lemmy.world
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        1 year 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.

  • Ookami38@sh.itjust.works
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    1 year ago

    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.

  • Stalinwolf@lemmy.ca
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    1 year 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.

    • Zendegy@lemm.ee
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      6 days ago

      She’ll get through it. I had a similar experience, but it passed. I can’t picture my daughter in my mind, but I can describe her and recognize her and, as it happens, she has aphantasia, too. Indeed, I only realized I did because of her. She said that, because she is autistic and has always known how different she is, she knew it wasn’t just metaphorical when people spoke of “mind’s eye” and “picturing” things. Remind her of how much aphantasia frees her from. I wouldn’t trade.

    • Brosplosion@lemm.ee
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      1 year 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

    • GrundlButter@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      1 year 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.

    • invisiblegorilla@sh.itjust.works
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      1 year ago

      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@lemmy.world
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        1 year 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.

  • jared@mander.xyz
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    1 year 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.

    • Zendegy@lemm.ee
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      6 days ago

      I found it very interesting to learn that they believe aphantasics can form the mental image, they just can’t access it. Minds are amazing!

    • wahming@monyet.cc
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      1 year 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.

      • narisomo@lemm.ee
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        1 year 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).

      • nik9000@programming.dev
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        1 year 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.

    • ivy@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      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@lemmy.ml
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          1 year 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@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            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@lemmy.ml
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      1 year 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.

    • arin@lemmy.world
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      1 year 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