It's weird. And I'm not knowledgeable enough to give precise scientific answer. But I'd describe as I can do these rotations. But then if you ask me to describe the shape precisely I realize it was lower resolution
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Replying to @adam_zethraeus @azthrs and
Yeah I have had discussions with others about this. Think this is mostly correct Need more robust way to test for this
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Replying to @RealtimeAI @kevinakwok and
For me, I can see the red star really clearly. As I add more shapes I start to lose definition. I can see a circle inside a square easily but if you put a star inside the circle I need to start "tracing". There's a better way to describe this activity. When the images...
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Replying to @Molson_Hart @RealtimeAI and
Get complex the image goes dark for me but I get a spotlight. I can put the spotlight on images on parts of the images to see those parts clearly. I think this happens because non-autistic eidectics have a limit to our working memory, i.e. the number of numbers you can remember.
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Replying to @Molson_Hart @RealtimeAI and
For whatever it's worth, I think I am 99th percentile at this (I can play chess without looking at the board). For me I process all information through images and I don't understand how other people think, which is why I find aphantasia interesting. Anyways...my 2 cents.
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Replying to @Molson_Hart @RealtimeAI and
My question is, for the people who can see the red star, are you creative? People who cannot? I think this is correlated.
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Replying to @Molson_Hart @RealtimeAI and
I for sure think this is correlated. And wonder if there's a even higher form of being able to see--being able to see all potential future forms Your description of what you can do is fascinating, because that makes tons of sense--but makes clear you can visualize more than me
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Replying to @kevinakwok @RealtimeAI and
I also wonder that, but don't have an answer that relates to creativity. Of course, being able to rotate or warp an object in your mind is helpful for tasks such as mechanical engineering or design. I also wonder if the ability to visualize is related to ambition.
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For example, if you can close your eyes and imagine yourself rich, it seems more possible and perhaps this encourages people to work harder than they would otherwise if they could not see what they're trying to achieve.
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