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My internal voice never shuts up, but when I try to picture an image, I just don’t see anything.
I think this is me too. All the chitter chatter, but I don't think I really see images? I am trying to picture an apple and just confusing myself and giving myself anxiety about where I stand haha
My internal voice never shuts up, but when I try to picture an image, I just don’t see anything.
I think this is me too. All the chitter chatter, but I don't think I really see images? I am trying to picture an apple and just confusing myself and giving myself anxiety about where I stand haha
When I try to picture something, it makes my brain feel weird. It’s so funny that I never really thought about this before. Once, in college, I was taking a yoga class, and the teacher gave us paper and told us to picture something in our mind’s eye and then draw it. I drew what I saw, which was basically just gray swirly cloudiness. After class, she asked me if everything was okay with me.
I'm a 3. I read a lot and it's not black and white but it's not flushed out with crazy details.
Yeah, due to the prompt, I wanted to double check things and think of an apple. The apple has details including what kind, the condition, where the apple is sitting, the time of day, there's a person involved with a backstory. It's a whole thing.
I'm a 3. I read a lot and it's not black and white but it's not flushed out with crazy details.
Yeah, due to the prompt, I wanted to double check things and think of an apple. The apple has details including what kind, the condition, where the apple is sitting, the time of day, there's a person involved with a backstory. It's a whole thing.
I'm a 3. I read a lot and it's not black and white but it's not flushed out with crazy details.
Yeah, due to the prompt, I wanted to double check things and think of an apple. The apple has details including what kind, the condition, where the apple is sitting, the time of day, there's a person involved with a backstory. It's a whole thing.
I'm not like that. I can conjure the image of shit I'm reading, but it's not quite right. I can see it, but it's not that full flushed out vision. Dreams are the same. Visual, vivid, but always a little off. I'm somewhere between a 2 and 3.
But my internal dialogue on the other hand never shuts up. It's so intense that I have conversations out loud with myself. Or sometimes I just answer the internal dialogue out loud. It's a problem.
I have one of the blueprint posters and 3 of the stamp posters. They aren’t the cheap waxy poster paper but I higher quality type. The only issue is that because the company is in the UK, all the posters are in metric, meaning frames are a bit of a nightmare to find. Mine are all 80cm x 60cm which is NOT a standard poster size.
Michael's does have some pretty legit sales. If you have an IKEA nearby, they tend to have a good price on all the standard sizes. I buy a decent amount from Amazon because I am not trying to be very fancy with them. Regardless, I have spent so much money on frames.
Post by brittrock80 on Oct 10, 2024 13:42:43 GMT -5
We have a local framing business that has been very good to me. They are relatively expensive but if you don't buy the UV protection glass, etc. it's not too bad.
Also I brought in a picture of David Bowie and Debbie Harry for them to frame and the guy at the shop asked if the dude in the picure was me
Welcome back Bonz, but I do not find it strange that your presence being requested in the Orgy thread and then you showing up, like it was the quacking Bonzai Bat Signal.
generally, even people who have trouble with visualizing images in the mind doesn't affect the ability to do that task, because it's a different type of visual processing.
the visual perception system is really widely studied (and pretty fascinating). It's pretty well established that humans have two visual processing streams - a dorsal stream that process "where" information, and a ventral stream that processes "what" information. These streams connect to the parietal regions and temporal regions, respectively. Briefly (and very simply) parietal lobe interacts with pre-motor and motor regions driving behavior. Temporal lobe is highly connected with frontal areas that subserve cognition/executive function. Both streams have reciprocal feedback to visual cortex. Aphantasics are thought to have alterations in their ventral stream processing - the idea being that when told to visualize an image of an object, projections from frontal cortex aren't providing feedback to visual cortex to generate those images. It's not tied to a semantic memory problem - if i asked you to think about an apple, you could describe what you details about an apple (red, round, etc), but an aphantasic may have problems generating mental imagery due to alterations in "reverse" ventral stream processing that primes visual cortex to generate that percept in the mind.
Those of you that have trouble with imagined visual imagery: how would you rate your episodic memory (like, things in your past). Are you able to generate imagery of past events? If you imagine future events, are you able to picture any sort of sensory details? can you imagine other sensory percepts, like the smell of chocolate chip cookies baking or the sound of your ringtone?
generally, even people who have trouble with visualizing images in the mind doesn't affect the ability to do that task, because it's a different type of visual processing.
the visual perception system is really widely studied (and pretty fascinating). It's pretty well established that humans have two visual processing streams - a dorsal stream that process "where" information, and a ventral stream that processes "what" information. These streams connect to the parietal regions and temporal regions, respectively. Briefly (and very simply) parietal lobe interacts with pre-motor and motor regions driving behavior. Temporal lobe is highly connected with frontal areas that subserve cognition/executive function. Both streams have reciprocal feedback to visual cortex. Aphantasics are thought to have alterations in their ventral stream processing - the idea being that when told to visualize an image of an object, projections from frontal cortex aren't providing feedback to visual cortex to generate those images. It's not tied to a semantic memory problem - if i asked you to think about an apple, you could describe what you details about an apple (red, round, etc), but an aphantasic may have problems generating mental imagery due to alterations in "reverse" ventral stream processing that primes visual cortex to generate that percept in the mind.
Those of you that have trouble with imagined visual imagery: how would you rate your episodic memory (like, things in your past). Are you able to generate imagery of past events? If you imagine future events, are you able to picture any sort of sensory details? can you imagine other sensory percepts, like the smell of chocolate chip cookies baking or the sound of your ringtone?
generally, even people who have trouble with visualizing images in the mind doesn't affect the ability to do that task, because it's a different type of visual processing.
the visual perception system is really widely studied (and pretty fascinating). It's pretty well established that humans have two visual processing streams - a dorsal stream that process "where" information, and a ventral stream that processes "what" information. These streams connect to the parietal regions and temporal regions, respectively. Briefly (and very simply) parietal lobe interacts with pre-motor and motor regions driving behavior. Temporal lobe is highly connected with frontal areas that subserve cognition/executive function. Both streams have reciprocal feedback to visual cortex. Aphantasics are thought to have alterations in their ventral stream processing - the idea being that when told to visualize an image of an object, projections from frontal cortex aren't providing feedback to visual cortex to generate those images. It's not tied to a semantic memory problem - if i asked you to think about an apple, you could describe what you details about an apple (red, round, etc), but an aphantasic may have problems generating mental imagery due to alterations in "reverse" ventral stream processing that primes visual cortex to generate that percept in the mind.
Those of you that have trouble with imagined visual imagery: how would you rate your episodic memory (like, things in your past). Are you able to generate imagery of past events? If you imagine future events, are you able to picture any sort of sensory details? can you imagine other sensory percepts, like the smell of chocolate chip cookies baking or the sound of your ringtone?
third option on first row and second option on second row
, right?
Those of you that have trouble with imagined visual imagery: how would you rate your episodic memory (like, things in your past). Are you able to generate imagery of past events? If you imagine future events, are you able to picture any sort of sensory details? can you imagine other sensory percepts, like the smell of chocolate chip cookies baking or the sound of your ringtone?
My memory in general is not great. I occasionally get flashes of memories, but it’s not a strong image, and I can’t hold on to it. There’s one of my dad in a blue shirt in the kitchen when I was probably fourteen or fifteen. It pops in my head sometimes randomly. I’m trying right now to pull up memories, and there is a visual aspect to them. Like, I’m thinking about one of the first times I saw my husband, and I can remember seeing him through the window of my apartment.
I’ve been thinking about this a lot of the last couple of days, and I’m starting to feel like the more I think about it, maybe I’m visualizing some things. Like, I am planning on baking cookies tomorrow, and I know what it looks like for me to get or butter and sugar, to put those things in the mixer, and for the mixer to be running. I can think about what those things look like, and in a way that feels like visualization, but I don’t know if that’s really what I’m doing. I wouldn’t call it seeing these things in my head. It feels more like just knowing what they look like.
There are no other sensory aspects to this. I definitely can’t imagine the smell of the vanilla or the sounds of the mixer.
generally, even people who have trouble with visualizing images in the mind doesn't affect the ability to do that task, because it's a different type of visual processing.
the visual perception system is really widely studied (and pretty fascinating). It's pretty well established that humans have two visual processing streams - a dorsal stream that process "where" information, and a ventral stream that processes "what" information. These streams connect to the parietal regions and temporal regions, respectively. Briefly (and very simply) parietal lobe interacts with pre-motor and motor regions driving behavior. Temporal lobe is highly connected with frontal areas that subserve cognition/executive function. Both streams have reciprocal feedback to visual cortex. Aphantasics are thought to have alterations in their ventral stream processing - the idea being that when told to visualize an image of an object, projections from frontal cortex aren't providing feedback to visual cortex to generate those images. It's not tied to a semantic memory problem - if i asked you to think about an apple, you could describe what you details about an apple (red, round, etc), but an aphantasic may have problems generating mental imagery due to alterations in "reverse" ventral stream processing that primes visual cortex to generate that percept in the mind.
Those of you that have trouble with imagined visual imagery: how would you rate your episodic memory (like, things in your past). Are you able to generate imagery of past events? If you imagine future events, are you able to picture any sort of sensory details? can you imagine other sensory percepts, like the smell of chocolate chip cookies baking or the sound of your ringtone?
hadn't thought about this much but i guess when i read i don't visualize stuff at all, or when doing a meditation of "picture in your mind" i don't see shit. but i can understand it?
for the rotational task, that i can do, i can conceptualize that.
as for memory- i have a fairly spatial memory. like i remember where i was, how a room was oriented, who was standing/sitting where and what people were doing- and i don't necessarily see an image but i can understand it much like reading a book. i can "picture" sounds in my mind absolutely- the sound of someones voice, a screech, music etc etc. just don't see anything and had never thought much of it!
generally, even people who have trouble with visualizing images in the mind doesn't affect the ability to do that task, because it's a different type of visual processing.
the visual perception system is really widely studied (and pretty fascinating). It's pretty well established that humans have two visual processing streams - a dorsal stream that process "where" information, and a ventral stream that processes "what" information. These streams connect to the parietal regions and temporal regions, respectively. Briefly (and very simply) parietal lobe interacts with pre-motor and motor regions driving behavior. Temporal lobe is highly connected with frontal areas that subserve cognition/executive function. Both streams have reciprocal feedback to visual cortex. Aphantasics are thought to have alterations in their ventral stream processing - the idea being that when told to visualize an image of an object, projections from frontal cortex aren't providing feedback to visual cortex to generate those images. It's not tied to a semantic memory problem - if i asked you to think about an apple, you could describe what you details about an apple (red, round, etc), but an aphantasic may have problems generating mental imagery due to alterations in "reverse" ventral stream processing that primes visual cortex to generate that percept in the mind.
Those of you that have trouble with imagined visual imagery: how would you rate your episodic memory (like, things in your past). Are you able to generate imagery of past events? If you imagine future events, are you able to picture any sort of sensory details? can you imagine other sensory percepts, like the smell of chocolate chip cookies baking or the sound of your ringtone?
I can’t do mental rotation tasks at all. Episodic memory is excellent. Certain smells can generate very strong and detailed memories of the past. Like the smell of Phenergan with codeine cough syrup (purple drank) brings back strong non visual memories of getting pneumonia at the age of 9.
by Jimmy Chin too. Gonna be a banger of a documentary
I wonder if they will ever find the camera. If they were both found on or at least close to the north face you have to assume it's there somewhere unless it was already recovered by the Chinese expeditions. Also makes you wonder if they made it all the way and decided to come down the north face for some reason.
thejeremy fractured and severely sprained his right ankle, stepping down off a step yesterday. Rolled his ankle and fell into the grass. He was literally leaving a doctor's appt at the hospital and came home. I was getting ready for work, set him up for the day and then took him to the ER today.
He got really lucky, he can still drive and only has a removable cast. 🤦♀️💀