Properties of imagined experience across visual, auditory, and other sensory modalities

Conscious Cogn. 2024 Jan:117:103598. doi: 10.1016/j.concog.2023.103598. Epub 2023 Dec 11.

Abstract

Little is known about the perceptual characteristics of mental images nor how they vary across sensory modalities. We conducted an exhaustive survey into how mental images are experienced across modalities, mainly targeting visual and auditory imagery of a single stimulus, the letter "O", to facilitate direct comparisons. We investigated temporal properties of mental images (e.g. onset latency, duration), spatial properties (e.g. apparent location), effort (e.g. ease, spontaneity, control), movement requirements (e.g. eye movements), real-imagined interactions (e.g. inner speech while reading), beliefs about imagery norms and terminologies, as well as respondent confidence. Participants also reported on the five traditional senses and their prominence during thinking, imagining, and dreaming. Overall, visual and auditory experiences dominated mental events, although auditory mental images were superior to visual mental images on almost every metric tested except regarding spatial properties. Our findings suggest that modality-specific differences in mental imagery may parallel those of other sensory neural processes.

Keywords: Aphantasia; Auditory; Hyperphantasia; Individual differences; Inner speech; Mental imagery; Multimodal; Phenomenology; Visual; Vividness.

MeSH terms

  • Auditory Perception
  • Humans
  • Imagery, Psychotherapy
  • Imagination*
  • Sensation*
  • Visual Perception