Litcius/Paper detail

What is the Link Between Mental Imagery and Sensory Sensitivity? Insights from Aphantasia

Carla Dance, Jamie Ward, Julia Simner

2021Perception97 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

People with aphantasia have impoverished visual imagery so struggle to form mental pictures in the mind's eye. By testing people with and without aphantasia, we investigate the relationship between sensory imagery and sensory sensitivity (i.e., hyper- or hypo-reactivity to incoming signals through the sense organs). In Experiment 1 we first show that people with aphantasia report impaired imagery across multiple domains (e.g., olfactory, gustatory etc.) rather than simply vision. Importantly, we also show that imagery is related to sensory sensitivity: aphantasics reported not only lower imagery, but also lower sensory sensitivity. In Experiment 2, we showed a similar relationship between imagery and sensitivity in the general population. Finally, in Experiment 3 we found behavioural corroboration in a Pattern Glare Task, in which aphantasics experienced less visual discomfort and fewer visual distortions typically associated with sensory sensitivity. Our results suggest for the very first time that sensory imagery and sensory sensitivity are related, and that aphantasics are characterised by both lower imagery, and lower sensitivity. Our results also suggest that aphantasia (absence of visual imagery) may be more accurately defined as a subtype of a broader imagery deficit we name dysikonesia, in which weak or absent imagery occurs across multiple senses.

Topics & Concepts

Mental imageSensory systemPsychologyCognitive psychologyAuditory imagerySensitivity (control systems)PopulationAudiologyNeuroscienceCognitionMedicineEngineeringElectronic engineeringEnvironmental healthFace Recognition and PerceptionMultisensory perception and integrationOlfactory and Sensory Function Studies