If you're seen my laser tracer stuff, it's kind of like that, with varying levels of detail/simplification. I figure how good you're at this varies between people though. Obviously people with photographic memory are much better at recalling such details.
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Replying to @BahamutLagoon25 @byuu_san and
Ha, so you still get to recall sound? I lack that as well; as a drifter teen I discovered I can 'hear' music I'm thinking of vividly when I'm extremely exhausted, on the verge of falling asleep, and actually thought I was hallucinating before I learned people do that all the time
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Replying to @BahamutLagoon25 @byuu_san and
I'm the same, but interestingly it's not an exact copy. It *feels* like an exact copy, but if I sit down and actually try to analyze a song and copy it in a synthesizer, I often find I've been picking up (and audiating) some parts wrong.
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You know what the most bewildering question people ask when you say you don't seem to have an imagination, or visual memory? It's 'why (or how) do you read books then, if you can't see what happens?' It really gets you thinking on how different our conceptual frameworks are
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You know, this reminds me of language. I'm bilingual (half trilingual?) and people ask me what language I think in. I... don't know? Unless I'm explicitly trying to put things into words, it's some abstract conceptual system, not a language.
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Replying to @marcan42
Same, basically. And this seems to be very much related to how I can't see things in my head, but still somehow can translate them to paper - it's like you don't have to, it's something deeper. I see my drawings the first time when I am actually drawing, like everyone else
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Oh I do that too, explicitly, sometimes. I find it interesting to imagine myself writing an article or giving a talk. But most of the time there is no conversation, it's just some kind of higher level conceptual flow.
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This is related to how some people learning languages "translate" in their head. I don't; if I have trouble recalling a word I might search for it based on other languages, but most of the time when I'm speaking or listening in a language, there is a direct mapping to ideas.
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