andrewducker (
andrewducker) wrote2021-06-13 12:00 pm
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Interesting Links for 13-06-2021
- How to Mute Twitter's Suggested Tweets on Your Timeline
- (tags:twitter )
- Can't See Pictures in Your Mind? You're Not Alone. And Now We Know There Are People That See Particularly Vivid Ones.
- (tags:vision imagination memory brain neuroscience psychology )
- How the Web Became Unreadable
- (tags:accessibility web fail )
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There's an app called reader view for making text easier to read (black on light yellow/brown background). I hope there are comparable aps for phones and other browsers.
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Oh yes!
I'm colour/music synaesthetic!
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I remember, a long time ago now, browsing an internet thread where somebody professed himself totally baffled that people could find questions like "How many points on the maple leaf on the Canadian flag" difficult. After all, if you've seen it once, can't you just picture it and count the points?
He was getting a lot of downvotes, but I was the only one to stop and explain that most people, in fact, cannot do that. That I believed he could do that, and that he thought his experience was typical, but that he was probably at the far extreme.
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Brains are a hell of a thing.
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Mind's Eye
I have a mind picture of physical things, but it is not the same as a photograph or painting. Colour may or may not be there. There is a type of 3D-ness, but static. Glancing isn't enough - if I haven't noticed it on viewing, it is probably absent in my representation. I can sometimes read my class notes in my head. To create a grocery shopping list, I walk around the grocery store (okay: I float spookily around the empty grocery store).
However, since I have moved so many times in my life, I often know where I kept a thing three moves ago, but not now. Perfect internal image of the old location, but quite useless. By far the worst, though, is that if I have decided that I want a thing to be put away in a particular spot in the new place, that is where I expect it to be. It doesn't matter whether or not I have discovered the thing won't fit there. I have very firm mind pictures of the thing being in the perfect place, and no amount of it not being there will budge the image or provoke the memory of where I eventually actually put the thing.
I have always assumed that I can rotate shapes in my head because I learned to sew young. When cutting out pattern pieces, getting the best fit on the rectangle may involve laying pieces upside down and backwards and flipped. One has to keep track or nothing it going to work.
I often wonder how people who don't have internal representations cope. I suppose it's like google - now that we've got it, I would hate to do without it, but we did manage okay before we had it.
Re: Mind's Eye