ToughDiamond wrote:
What I mean is, when I learned to draw, I remember going through a long phase where I'd start at one end of the object-to-be-drawn, focussing on the details, and then move along detail by detail until the picture was complete. The main flaw was that I'd end up with lines that didn't join up, because I'd never stepped back to see how the whole thing was lining up. I had to apply a lot of self-discipline to "rough out" the basic picture first, which always felt wrong for me because the large, rough preliminary image seemed inappropriate, it was nothing like the final drawing was supposed to look like.....I hated anything that was fuzzy, I wanted everything to be sharp and clear-cut right from the start. But as soon as I started working on the detail, I no longer noticed whether the detail was being drawn in the right place on the paper.
I had similar problems with writing a line of words on a page so that they'd fit properly......they'd begin too large, and then get smaller as the right-hand edge of the paper came into view.
Is this something that all kids go through, or is it a sign of autism? Seems to me it could be a very direct way of telling whether a person has trouble shifting focus between the big picture and the detail.
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Words: Vision, eyes, vision acuity, seeing 3D, integrating vision from both eyes into a single unit, inattention, extremely short attention span, working memory/short term memory, normal imagination, ADHD Inattentive, petit/absence, constructional apraxia, whole (forest) vs parts (trees), left hemisphere, right hemisphere, corpus callosum, and so on. Recall reading a How To (understand) Hyperactivity book (1981) about ADHD Inattentive by C. Thomas Wild which discussed what you are writing about. Wild reported that several FDA approved medicines had a dramatic ability to temporarily improve aspects of drawing (Tirend, NoDoz, Bonine)(not a cure) due to the ability of the medicines to temporarily increase attention span a little, to temporarily stabilize vision/accurate eye tracking a little, and to temporarily improve aspects of working memory/short term memory a little (not a cure). Other words: normal perception of movement (as with a baseball or a football), face blindness, color blindness, etc.