Verdandi wrote:
I primarily think in pictures or movies, and I tend to picture what I read as movies and could not recite exact quotes without recalling a picture of the page I read, which is not usually possible for me.
I think there's a spatial element to my thinking because I often feel like concepts exist in a particular space relative to me. This is not a constant and something can move around depending on what else is going on (I may feel that the video game subforum here is off to my left today, but it may end up to my right tomorrow because a video I am watching on youtube is to the left). I haven't really tried to categorize how this works because it is a bit ephemeral and I don't really notice it on an explicit level.
I find it fairly easy to visualize spatial relationships as well.
Verdandi wrote:
I primarily think in pictures or movies, and I tend to picture what I read as movies and could not recite exact quotes without recalling a picture of the page I read, which is not usually possible for me.
I think there's a spatial element to my thinking because I often feel like concepts exist in a particular space relative to me. This is not a constant and something can move around depending on what else is going on (I may feel that the video game subforum here is off to my left today, but it may end up to my right tomorrow because a video I am watching on youtube is to the left). I haven't really tried to categorize how this works because it is a bit ephemeral and I don't really notice it on an explicit level.
I find it fairly easy to visualize spatial relationships as well.
YES! It's the same for me. It's much more noticeable when remembering things, like names, though the thinking always happens in a space.
I guess the correct word for me would be visual-spatial thinker.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Visual_thinking#Spatial-temporal_reasoning_and_spatial_visualization_ability wrote:
Spatial-temporal reasoning and spatial visualization ability
Spatial-temporal reasoning is the ability to visualize special patterns and mentally manipulate them over a time-ordered sequence of spatial transformations. Spatial visualization ability is the ability to manipulate mentally two- and three-dimensional figures.
Spatial-temporal reasoning is prominent among visual thinkers as well as among kinesthetic learners (those who learn through movement, physical patterning and doing) and logical thinkers (mathematical thinkers who think in patterns and systems) who may not be strong visual thinkers at all.