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Our Visual Imagination Is Severely Limited (undark.org)
120 points by QAPereo on Dec 25, 2017 | hide | past | favorite | 21 comments



Magic Leap is relying on our visual imagination, https://www.rollingstone.com/glixel/features/lightwear-intro...

"The current thinking is that about 40 percent of your neurological power is being used for visual processing ... the visual cortex functions a lot like a graphics processor in a computer. It takes the information fed to it by the eyes and renders a world for the person to perceive. And that it only really needs to be fed a very sparse amount of data to do that. “Maybe we all have genetically passed on versions of the world and all we do is intake sparse change data to update that model, but we have a persistent model ... Everything you think is outside of you is completely rendered internally by you, co-created by you plus the analog light field signal ... The world you are living in, you are creating constantly"


Reminds me of this:

> According to neuroscientist Anil Seth, we're all hallucinating all the time; when we agree about our hallucinations, we call it "reality."

[(8) Your brain hallucinates your conscious reality | Anil Seth - YouTube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lyu7v7nWzfo)


Very nice article. It is so refreshing when someone who really knows what they are talking about writes in the popular science writing style. As a post-doc in a related field of cog neuroscience, I give the article my thumbs up.


I'd like to reconcile this with the fact that some people can solve a rubik's cube blindfolded after having a good look at it. It seems like they have the ability to imagine the relative movements of 26 objects at once.


It is well known that while everyone has roughly the same capacity of visual working memory, expertise in an area drastically alters our efficiency in utilizing that memory. For example, chess masters are much better than novices at recalling chess positions when they look like typical middle-game positions, but they perform nearly the same as novices on random arrangements of pieces [1]. In the rubik's cube case, the expert is not memorizing 54 individual squares, but rather they are taking advantage of learned patterns to store fewer, larger chunks.

For another example, consider memorizing strings of letters: Which one do you find easier? GKAMIFTBW or IBMFBICIA

[1] Chase, W. G., & Simon, H. A. (1973). Perception in chess. Cognitive psychology, 4(1), 55-81.



Great question and I have no idea. My comment was geared toward those with normal function (should have specified). There is a large literature on memory and austism/savantism, but I'm familiar with none of it. However, my guess would be that the current best answer is as it is with nearly all of autism -- we don't know.


And likewise with the fact that a surprising number of people have 'aphantasia' and cannot visually imagine things at all. Humans obviously have a highly variable capacity for visualisation.

TFA also seems to conflate "imagining a scene containing a combination of objects" with "imagining an assortment of randomly oriented Gabor patches", which I don't think follows at all. You can't just disregard the semantic content of what's being imagined. It's like saying humans can't recall sentences containing 50 characters because they can't recite a string of 50 random letters.


It is well known that semantic groupings increase memory or working memory capacity. The author alluded to that. The Gabor patches are probably used in part because semantic strategies are more difficult to use and gain from using those stimuli.


Or perhaps just memorized the solution (that they figured out while still being able to see the cube).

I haven't ever tried doing it blindfolded, but I would expect there is not too much visualization behind it.


Solving blindfolded is just momorizing 2 sequences about phone number length. Not a whole lot of visualization. Might be different for the top tier bld solvers


Based on my own experience (not solving Rubik's cubes, but still), it's similar to how one can navigate with turn-by-turn directions despite not having a map. You just need to know how to "walk the graph" of the objects involved.


IIRC there are well established patterns to solve or nearly solve a cube from given starting conditions. Could that be it?

Edit: https://ruwix.com/the-rubiks-cube/how-to-solve-the-rubiks-cu...


Kinda tangential, but after living alone for a few years I've updated my selection criteria for furniture to prioritize cleaning difficulty and comfort over visual style. Given its nature, industrial-style furniture is usually easier to clean and it's made from tough material capable of handling a wider range of cleaning chemicals.

I wonder what the outcome would be for a person with autism. I remember watching a video of a psychologist explaining that normal people are better at abstracting visual concepts, and used a drawing of a house as an example. Most people would likely draw the traditional pentagon house with chimney, but a person with autism would need to draw a specific house.

Don't we improve on this by leveraging tools? e.g. paper and pen, computers, etc. I don't have to imagine a large number of visualizations all at once, I can just draw a mockup and reference it when needed. That lets you group everything up into a conceptual black box, instead of tracking it all in your head.

In the case of treating phobias, can't we leverage photos and video? From an uneducated perspective, it would seem like a reasonable middle ground.


What do you mean by leveraging photos and videos to treat phobias? Sounds interesting


Well, in the article they mention that you need to physically confront the phobia in order to overcome it, or confront it by a method which incorporates your visual imagination. But that seems to me like it kinda skips over the possibility of using photos or video to become more comfortable.

  The mentioned alternative would be to use your visual imagination. However,


Last year at CoreOS Fest I spoke to a gentleman from Google who said they think limiting Tensorflow nodes processing power and/or trimming out some nodes entirely appears to cause the entire model to become more robust and perform better by spreading certain attributes (like edge detection) across multiple nodes. A type of holistic training, if you will. I see correlation with a limitation on visualizations.

Regarding this particular article, members of this research group at New South Wales and related studies have been making a variety of claims regarding visualization over the past few years, including what appear to be loaded comments about Aphantasia.

These comments include:

“It’s a lack of the mind’s eye. My hunch is that there is something a bit different about their brains and that there may be a genetic component.” — Adam Zeman, University of Exeter

“If there’s too much activity and noise, it’s like sketching on a dirty piece of paper: it’s hard to see the drawing.” — Joel Pearson, University of New South Wales

“It could also alter moral judgement.” — Alice Klein, reporter for New Scientist while relating comments by Joel Pearson.

I would present a counter argument that our visual imaginations are not something to be considered "severely limited". Instead, our imaginations are something that may be limited, either by intent (see Zen) or by circumstances (non-visualizer). If someone happens to be a great visualizer, then good for them, but don't tell me I'm limited. ;)

Judging it to be something we lack and thus need more of is questionable. Perhaps the desired outcome is to have less of it, rather than more.


> The will of action is always dualistic. Is it possible to go beyond this will which is separative and discover a state in which this dualistic action is not? That can only be found when we directly experience the state in which the thinker is the thought. We now think the thought is separate from the thinker; but is that so? We would like to think it is, because then the thinker can explain matters through his thought. The effort of the thinker is to become more or become less; and therefore, in that struggle, in that action of the will, in 'becoming', there is always the deteriorating factor; we are pursuing a false process and not a true process.

> Is there a division between the thinker and the thought? So long as they are separate, divided, our effort is wasted; we are pursuing a false process which is destructive and which is the deteriorating factor. We think the thinker is separate from his thought. When I find that I am greedy, possessive, brutal, I think I should not be all this. The thinker then tries to alter his thoughts and therefore effort is made to 'become; in that process of effort he pursues the false illusion that there are two separate processes, whereas there is only one process. I think therein lies the fundamental factor of deterioration.

> Is it possible to experience that state when there is only one entity and not two separate processes, the experiencer and the experience? Then perhaps we shall find out what it is to be creative, and what the state is in which there is no deterioration at any time, in whatever relationship man may be.

—Jiddu Krishnamurti, The First and Last Freedom, Chapter 15, The Thinker and The Thought


Several of these recent studies read like the brain has specs, like a fancy GPU.

Scary thought but I guess at some level it had to be true.


Why should Discovery of these "specs" be scary? I find it fascinating, by know the limitations of myself I can actively choose to think in ways that I am more likely to be good at. I can use that new active process of thinking to help me, for example, design software that is easier to reason about.


Some people are afraid of the truth. Many questions people don't like the answer to.




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