Some of the cooler research I've heard about recently has looked at aphantasia and how different people are in their ability to visualize things, so I thought it would be fun to see how people on the forum experience reading and writing. When you're reading, do you see a full picture of what's happening in your mind's eye, and is it very detailed? If not, do you perhaps hear the words, as though someone were telling you a story, or is it something more abstract?
On the flip side, how does it work when you're writing a story? Do you see scenes and characters in your mind and try to transcribe what happens, focus on the language itself rather than seeing a picture? Something else?
When I'm reading, I do automatically visualize what's going on in the story, although I'm still reading the words and can vaguely hear them at the same time. Generally the more engaging I find a scene, the less I notice the actual prose. My overall visualizations aren't great, and tend to be pretty foggy aside from whatever the text is focusing on right that instant. They're also pretty much exclusively visual; I can "hear" characters talking, but only in my own mental voice, so I've never been able to do the thing where people discuss who would voice their characters. If you asked me if a particular person sounded like one of my characters, I could tell you yes or no... Like, a wrong voice will sound wrong for them, but if you asked me to name who they sounded like I'd never be able to tell you.
Writing for me is basically the process in reverse; I do see a cinematic of sorts of what's going on in the scene, and it does have words attached to it... I transcribe the words, more or less, as the process of writing. My visualization still isn't great, though, which is probably why I've never put a lot of emphasis on visual descriptions. Also, because I tend to get only a small clear area that I can "see" at a time, often the spatial relationships between people/things are a bit foggy, since I focus on one thing at a time and not the whole. Apparently there are some people who can map out the entire layout of a building and know where everything is and super notice when things move around inappropriately in a scene, and it blows my mind because you could sneak all kinds of absolutely nonsensical layouts past me, I would never notice a thing!
On the flip side, how does it work when you're writing a story? Do you see scenes and characters in your mind and try to transcribe what happens, focus on the language itself rather than seeing a picture? Something else?
When I'm reading, I do automatically visualize what's going on in the story, although I'm still reading the words and can vaguely hear them at the same time. Generally the more engaging I find a scene, the less I notice the actual prose. My overall visualizations aren't great, and tend to be pretty foggy aside from whatever the text is focusing on right that instant. They're also pretty much exclusively visual; I can "hear" characters talking, but only in my own mental voice, so I've never been able to do the thing where people discuss who would voice their characters. If you asked me if a particular person sounded like one of my characters, I could tell you yes or no... Like, a wrong voice will sound wrong for them, but if you asked me to name who they sounded like I'd never be able to tell you.
Writing for me is basically the process in reverse; I do see a cinematic of sorts of what's going on in the scene, and it does have words attached to it... I transcribe the words, more or less, as the process of writing. My visualization still isn't great, though, which is probably why I've never put a lot of emphasis on visual descriptions. Also, because I tend to get only a small clear area that I can "see" at a time, often the spatial relationships between people/things are a bit foggy, since I focus on one thing at a time and not the whole. Apparently there are some people who can map out the entire layout of a building and know where everything is and super notice when things move around inappropriately in a scene, and it blows my mind because you could sneak all kinds of absolutely nonsensical layouts past me, I would never notice a thing!