Close your eyes and picture a beach. For most people, you can “see” it in your mind—water, sand, sunshine. For around 3 to 4% of the population, however, no image appears. The mental screen stays blank, and many of them spent years assuming everyone else was speaking metaphorically when they said, “picture this.” That condition is called aphantasia, and what’s really weird: a lot of people who have it still dream in full color.

A new study published in Scientific Reports set out to explain that contradiction and came back with something more complicated than a single answer. Researchers from the University of Queensland and the University of Bonn surveyed 205 participants, 84 of them classified as visual aphantasics, asking them to rate how vividly their waking imagination worked across six senses, then report how often those same senses appeared in their dreams. To add texture, participants also mentally revisited familiar scenarios—a dinner party, a sick day at home, a trip to the beach—and ranked which senses came through.

At the group level, the results pointed in one direction. Senses a person couldn’t summon while awake were more dulled in their dreams too, with the strongest links appearing for inner speech, hearing, and taste. Vision was the exception, which the researchers attribute to the fact that nearly everyone in the aphantasia group had little visual imagery to begin with, making it hard to measure variation. Aphantasia Probably Isn’t a Single Condition

The averages, though, are almost beside the point. The individual spread is where things get a bit wild. Some participants had virtually no waking sensory imagination and equally blank dreams. Others couldn’t picture, hear, or feel anything voluntarily while awake, yet all of it came flooding back once they fell asleep. Among the visual aphantasics in the study, 46% said they always dream in pictures. About 8% said they never do. What struck the researchers was that each person’s waking-to-dreaming relationship stayed consistent across senses—loose in one area, loose across all of them; tight in one, tight throughout. A stable personal signature, wildly different from one person to the next.

One possible explanation the researchers raise involves differences in how brain regions coordinate during sleep versus waking hours, which could account for why one person’s dreaming mind mirrors their conscious one while another’s runs completely free. Both lead authors have aphantasia themselves, which is what drew them to the question in the first place.

The study’s broader implication is that aphantasia has been treated as a single condition when the evidence suggests it’s more like a cluster of related ones. Two people can have the same diagnosis and, once the lights go out, inhabit completely different inner worlds.

  • frongt@lemmy.zip
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    1 day ago

    People who don’t visualize an apple like it’s a picture on an iPhone can still visualize an apple. They know it’s red, the size of a fist, round/tooth shaped, etc.

    So they don’t visualize it, then. Imagine, recall characteristics, yes, but without a visual it’s not visualizing.

    • Aussiemandeus@aussie.zone
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      18 hours ago

      Yeah i can describe an apple to you but I sure can’t see it.

      But i also have trouble describing people too.

      I can tell you my wife is shorter then me and has mid to long hair of a dark colour but no idea about much else unless I see her.

      When we watch movies if two characters who look similar appear she has to tell me who was who cause I can’t keep track of them.

      • frongt@lemmy.zip
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        12 hours ago

        I had that problem with The Departed. Great movie, but why did they have to make Matt Damon and Leonardo DiCaprio’s characters look so similar?

      • appetizer@lemmy.today
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        17 hours ago

        I had aphantasia as well. I also have the issue with identifying people or describing people. Until now I thought those were two separate issues.

        Thank you for your post, it has really helped me.

        • Aussiemandeus@aussie.zone
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          16 hours ago

          They very well might be, I’m no doctor haha but I’ve always put it to being the same problem because i can’t draw either but i can look at something and draw it.

          I hated art in school until we started drawing vases and plants etc from the room