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cognition

Can You Picture an Apple? Aphantasia and the Mind's Eye

Close your eyes and picture an apple. Can you see it? About 1 in 100 people genuinely cannot — a trait called aphantasia. Here's what the research says and how to check your own imagery vividness.

Maya Lindqvist · Senior Health WriterMedically reviewed by Dr. James Okonkwo, MDPublished June 4, 2026 · 8 min read

Close your eyes for a moment. Picture a bright red apple sitting on a white table. Can you see it? Is the image crisp and detailed — the sheen on the skin, the slight shadow underneath — or is it vague and fleeting? Or is there genuinely nothing there at all?

For most people that question feels almost silly. Of course they can picture an apple. But for a small, real portion of the population, no image forms. Not a dim one, not a faint outline — just nothing. That experience has a name: aphantasia.

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The questionnaire takes about three minutes. You'll imagine four brief scenes and rate how vividly each one appears in your mind. There are no right or wrong answers — only honest ones.

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Key takeaways

  • Aphantasia (little or no voluntary visual imagery) affects roughly 1–4% of people; most live and work entirely normally.
  • Hyperphantasia — imagery so vivid it can feel as real as seeing — is more common, affecting around 6% of people.
  • The VVIQ (Marks 1973, 16 items, scored 16–80) is the standard self-report measure; a score near 16 suggests aphantasia, near 80 suggests hyperphantasia.
  • Aphantasia can be congenital (present from birth) or acquired after a brain injury, stroke, or illness — they likely have different mechanisms.

The imagery spectrum

Mental imagery doesn't work in binary — vivid or nothing. It's a continuous spectrum, and most people cluster somewhere in the broad middle. A large 2024 international study covering more than 9,000 participants put the picture together clearly:

6%

Estimated prevalence of hyperphantasia

Zeman et al., 2024 — over 9,000 participants across multiple countries

Average 52VVIQ score
Aphantasia (16–32)Below average (33–48)Typical imagery (49–64)Hyperphantasia (65–80)
VVIQ banded zones (16 items, 1–5 per item). Population average is roughly 52. Aphantasia research typically uses a cutoff of 16–32.

The numbers from that study: about 0.9% have complete aphantasia (VVIQ score of 16 — maximum "no image at all"), and another 3.3% fall into the dim/vague zone sometimes called hypophantasia. Combined, roughly 1 in 25 people struggle to generate useful visual imagery. At the other end, about 1 in 16 people report imagery vivid enough to rival actual vision.

What the VVIQ actually measures

David Marks designed the VVIQ in 1973 as a simple, repeatable way to capture something that had been almost impossible to study: individual differences in the vividness of mental images. The questionnaire gives you four everyday scenes to imagine — a close friend's face, a sunrise, a colourful shop interior, a familiar building — and asks you to rate each sub-item on a five-point scale:

  • 5 — Perfectly clear, as vivid as normal vision
  • 4 — Clear and reasonably vivid
  • 3 — Moderately clear and vivid
  • 2 — Vague and dim
  • 1 — No image at all

With 16 items, total scores run from 16 (no imagery whatsoever) to 80 (maximum vividness throughout). The measure doesn't test whether your memories are accurate — only how rich the mental picture feels to you.

Myth

Everyone pictures things in their head the same way — it's just a figure of speech if they say they can't.

Congenital vs. acquired aphantasia

Most people with aphantasia have had it their whole lives and often didn't realise anything was different until they heard the word "aphantasia" — usually as adults. This is congenital aphantasia: present from birth, often running in families (suggesting a genetic component), and generally unaccompanied by other neurological problems.

Acquired aphantasia is less common and develops after something disrupts normal brain function — a stroke, a head injury, or (in documented cases) even a depressive episode or certain medications. People who lose imagery they once had tend to notice immediately and may find it distressing.

The two routes to aphantasia

  1. CongenitalPresent from birth. Often only discovered in adulthood when the person learns that others form mental pictures. Family clustering suggests genetic factors. Usually no associated impairment.
  2. AcquiredOnset after a neurological event (stroke, TBI, illness) or psychological disruption. The person notices the change because imagery was previously normal. Warrants medical follow-up.

Does it affect daily life?

For most people with congenital aphantasia: not much. Many go decades without knowing anything is different. They dream (often in non-visual terms), navigate and recognise faces, and hold down demanding creative or technical careers. Some are architects, novelists, and artists — they just describe their creative process differently.

That said, research does find some patterns. People with aphantasia tend to recall autobiographical memories with less sensory detail and sometimes report weaker emotional resonance when revisiting past events. Some describe difficulty with face recognition, map-reading, and tasks that most people solve by mentally "seeing" something. The degree of impact varies widely between individuals.

Aphantasia is not a psychological disorder — it is a cognitive difference, and many people who have it consider it simply part of who they are.

Zeman et al., 2020

If you have congenital aphantasia and are functioning well, there is nothing to "fix". Understanding your cognitive style can be genuinely liberating — it often explains why certain memorisation techniques (visualisation, memory palaces) never clicked for you, and it opens the door to strategies that work with your actual cognitive wiring.

What your result means

Keep in mind that the VVIQ is a self-report questionnaire, not a clinical test. Your score reflects how you perceive your own imagery, which can vary with mood, tiredness, and how literally you interpreted the instructions. A single session is a useful data point — not a definitive label. If you scored very low and are troubled by it, a neuropsychologist can do a fuller assessment.

Frequently asked questions

What is aphantasia?
Aphantasia is the inability or near-inability to form voluntary visual mental images — commonly described as having a 'blind mind's eye.' People with aphantasia know what an apple looks like, but when they try to picture one with their eyes closed, no image appears. It is estimated to affect roughly 1–4% of people and is not classified as a disorder.
What is the VVIQ and how is it scored?
The VVIQ (Vividness of Visual Imagery Questionnaire) was developed by psychologist David Marks in 1973. It contains 16 items across four imagined scenes. Each item is rated 1 (no image at all) to 5 (as vivid as real vision), giving total scores from 16 to 80. Scores of 16–32 generally indicate aphantasia; scores of 65–80 indicate hyperphantasia. The population average is around 52.
Is aphantasia a medical condition or disorder?
No. Congenital aphantasia is considered a normal variation in human cognition, not a disorder. It does not appear in the DSM or ICD as a diagnosis. Most people with congenital aphantasia function well in all areas of life. Acquired aphantasia — which develops after a brain injury or illness — may warrant medical evaluation, but it too is not itself a disorder.
What is hyperphantasia?
Hyperphantasia is the opposite end of the imagery spectrum: imagery so vivid and detailed that it can feel almost indistinguishable from actually seeing. About 6% of people report this level of imagery. It is also a normal variation, though extremely vivid involuntary imagery can occasionally be distressing and is worth discussing with a clinician if it is causing problems.
Can aphantasia be treated or reversed?
There is no established treatment for congenital aphantasia, and most people with it do not seek one. Some case reports suggest acquired aphantasia can partially resolve as the underlying cause is treated. Research into non-invasive brain stimulation as a possible intervention is very early-stage. Strategies that work with — rather than against — a non-visual cognitive style are well worth exploring.

Free interactive test · ~5 min

Check your visual imagery vividness

The full 16-item VVIQ takes about three minutes. You'll get a score from 16 to 80 and a clear explanation of where you land on the imagery spectrum.

Take the VVIQ

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References

  1. 1.Zeman AZ, et al. (2024). An international estimate of the prevalence of differing visual imagery abilities. Cortex, PMC11518826.
  2. 2.Bi Y, et al. (2024). A Systematic Review of Aphantasia: Concept, Measurement, Neural Basis, and Theory Development. Brain Sciences, PMC11437436.
  3. 3.Marks DF. (1973). Vividness of Visual Imagery Questionnaire (VVIQ). ResearchGate / British Journal of Psychology.
  4. 4.Dance CJ, et al. (2021). The prevalence of aphantasia (imagery weakness) in the general population. Consciousness and Cognition.
  5. 5.Zeman AZ, et al. (2020). Extreme imagination – aphantasia, hyperphantasia and everything in between. Cortex.

This guide is educational and is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of a qualified clinician about your individual circumstances.