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failingslowly | 2 years ago
I wonder if there's a link between engineering skills and aphantasia, given the prevalence of the "programmer art" meme?
failingslowly | 2 years ago
I wonder if there's a link between engineering skills and aphantasia, given the prevalence of the "programmer art" meme?
vidarh|2 years ago
This is similar to how I found out - I assumed what I experienced was what people meant when they talked about visualizing things, and it took a long time before I realised that a lot of them meant it very literally when they said they could "see" things.
> I wonder if there's a link between engineering skills and aphantasia, given the prevalence of the "programmer art" meme?
Ed Catmull, ex-president of Pixar, has aphantasia, and he found that artists at Pixar where not all that more likely to be able to visualize well [1], so the "programmer art" bit is far more likely to be down to practice and interest (on average, at least). I think it's more likely that the better you are in a field, the less time you're likely to have to devote to getting good in another field. Of course there are always exceptions.
But his sample was hardly representative, and so it's hard to tell whether it makes a difference. Maybe it does, and people who work at Pixar, including non-art staff are just more likely to be sufficiently interested in art to overcome extra difficulties.
That said, for my part I was decent at art when I was younger, but my drawing style was different when "imagining" things than when drawing something I had in front of me. But I also suspect I'd commit "programmer art" if I tried again now, at least without a lot of practice.
[1] https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-47830256