Aphantasia and hyperphantasia: exploring imagery vividness extremes
University of Exeter · University of Edinburgh
Abstract
The vividness of imagery varies between individuals. However, the existence of people in whom conscious, wakeful imagery is markedly reduced, or absent entirely, was neglected by psychology until the recent coinage of 'aphantasia' to describe this phenomenon. 'Hyperphantasia' denotes the converse - imagery whose vividness rivals perceptual experience. Around 1% and 3% of the population experience extreme aphantasia and hyperphantasia, respectively. Aphantasia runs in families, often affects imagery across several sense modalities, and is variably associated with reduced autobiographical memory, face recognition difficulty, and autism. Visual dreaming is often preserved. Subtypes of extreme imagery appear to be…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 37.33
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 123
Authors
1Topics & keywords
- Psychology
- Mental image
- Cognitive psychology
- Perception
- Converse
- Population
- Neural correlates of consciousness
- Auditory imagery
- Quality Education