Tactile Aphantasia

Tactile aphantasia is the inability to mentally create touch sensations or textures - a 'touch-free imagination.' This can manifest alone or as part of multisensory aphantasia where multiple forms of mental imagery are affected. Like other forms of aphantasia, tactile aphantasia can be present from birth (congenital) or develop later in life (acquired). This variation provides insights into how the brain processes and remembers touch experiences without mental simulation. On this page, you'll find aphantasia research, personal stories, and community discussions about tactile aphantasia.

Expanding Aphantasia Definition: Researchers Propose New Boundaries
Article

Expanding Aphantasia Definition: Researchers Propose New Boundaries

Researchers expand aphantasia definition beyond "inability to visualize." This broader framework impacts how we understand and identify with the condition.

8 months agoby Tom Ebeyer and
Reference

Definition: Aphantasia

Zeman, A., Monzel, M., Pearson, J., Scholz, C. O., & Simner, J. (2025). Definition: aphantasia. Cortex, 182, 212–213. doi:10.1016/j.cortex.2024.07.019

9 months ago
Reference

Proposal for a consistent definition of aphantasia and hyperphantasia: A response to Lambert and Sibley (2022) and Simner and Dance (2022)

Monzel, M., Mitchell, D., Macpherson, F., Pearson, J., & Zeman, A. (2022). Proposal for a consistent definition of aphantasia and hyperphantasia: a response to lambert and sibley (2022) and simner and dance (2022). Cortex, 152, 74–76. doi:10.1016/j.cortex.2022.04.003

over 3 years ago
3 Things I Learned From Having Multisensory Aphantasia That Changed My Understanding Of The World
Article

3 Things I Learned From Having Multisensory Aphantasia That Changed My Understanding Of The World

My journey understanding the cognitive profiles of aphantasia and hyperphantasia started when I learned at age 30 that most of you have a superpower I don’t.

over 4 years agoby Steven Levithan
Switching The Focus From Visual Imagery
Article

Switching The Focus From Visual Imagery

A case for studying mental imagery as a whole

over 4 years ago
Think of a Horse: Describing Aphantasia
Article

Think of a Horse: Describing Aphantasia

How do you describe aphantasia? Founder of Aphantasia Network often gets asked this question. His answer? Think of a horse.

over 6 years agoby Tom Ebeyer

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