LuxoJr wrote:
Really? This is actually rather easy for me. Because I just see the picture in my head and, I'm not sure how, but words just come up instinctively. For example, let's use this picture:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/andrewevans/6043633815/in/photostreamSo the first thing I do when I visualize a picture (using this picture), I just see spots of focus, like the tree and the deer, the foreground, and the background. Then with each spot of focus, I just immediately see all the different details and apply words to them, kind of like terms that go with different parts of an anatomy. For example, the tree is obviously green, but I also think about specific things. Like not only is it green, but it could also be willowy, frail, balanced, prominent, isolated but accompanied by the deer at the same time. The ends of its tenuous branches extend outwards, as if reaching into open space, *sheltering* the deer.
It's a bit like drawing--describing a picture--except you're using words instead of lines and colors and the details must come to life through definitions.
That's not what they are talking about in this thread. They are talking about visual thinkers - people who process information visually. They take in more information thru their visual system than anything else. Thoughts, concepts, associations, emotions, experiences, etc are processed and stored as pictures and/or shapes and/or colors in the brain. For example: I experience anxiety as a white point of light bouncing off my forehead. I call it pinging. For years I had bad anxiety but I didn't know how to tell anyone because experiencing an emotion as a shape/color is hard to translate into verbal language because it doesn't make sense (for lack of a better explanation). Describing a picture in your head is easy, it's describing the meaning of a picture where it gets tricky because your (my) brain is processing the information "improperly" (I know it's not really improper, but again, for lack of a better term).
Then again, you may already understand all that I may have misread your post