Here are all the details about the Visual Imagination Conference 2016. Overview International conference at Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts, University of East Anglia, Norwich, UK, 21 – 22 May 2016The visual imagination is one of the most powerful human capacities.It plays a vital role in art and literature, religion and science, and has been studied and celebrated by artists, writers, philosophers, psychologists, and, now, neuroscientists.The event, which is the culmination of the AHRC-funded research project, ‘The Eye’s Mind’, brought together leaders in all these fields to shape a new and more integrated understanding of this mysterious mental resource.Keynote speakers included Paul Broks (psychology), Joel Pearson (neuroscience) and Michael Tye (philosophy). Document Programme of the Visual Imagination Conference 2016 (1.46 MB / PDF) Conference blog The Eye’s Mind: visual imagination, neuroscience and the humanities– an international conference at the Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts, University of East Anglia, Norwich, UK 21st-22nd May 2016Our Arts and Humanities Research Council project, The Eye’s Mind – a study of the neural basis of the visual imagination and its place in culture, culminated recently in a major conference. The project involved three strands – a review of the history of thought about the visual imagination, from Plato and Aristotle to Kosslyn and Pylyshyn; a metanalysis of brain imaging studies of visual imagery; a study of individuals at the extremes of the imagery vividness spectrum which extends from superabundance – ‘hyperphantasia’ – to absence, ‘aphantasia’.The conference included talks by every member of the project team (Susan Aldworth, artist; Matthew MacKisack, historian of ideas – and the project’s full-time Fellow; Fiona Macpherson, philosopher; John Onians, art historian; Crawford Winlove, neuroscientist; Adam Zeman, neurologist) together with a distinguished and lively group of contributors from a wide variety of disciplines. Over the course of the weekend, 24 speakers and 6 poster presenters explored the full range of the elusive but captivating topic of visual imagery in its historical, philosophical, artistic, literary, psychological, neurobiological and personal dimensions. Keynotes were given by Dr Paul Broks, a clinical psychologist turned creative writer, who engagingly introduced the concept of ‘imaginal reality’ by way of reflections on a set of cultural creations – the Greek gods – and a biological phenomenon – ‘sleep paralysis’ – that predisposes to vivid hallucinations; Prof Michael Tye (University of Austin, Texas), who discussed the nature of visual imagery in the light of philosophical debate and psychological experiment and Prof Joel Pearson (University of New South Wales, Sydney) who has developed path-breaking methods by which to measure the vividness, and even decode the contents, of imagery in the human brain.Submitted papers considered imagery as a force in artistic and scientific creativity; its role in the reading of literature; its importance in education and therapy; its significance in memory; its heightening in synaesthesia, the merging of the senses; its potential value in computer science. One of the most remarkable features of the meeting was that, probably for the first time in human history, it gathered together a sizeable group of individuals with ‘aphantasia’, a focus of the Eye’s Mind project, and, to date, a strangely neglected psychological phenomenon: there was strong enthusiasm for a future meeting devoted to this subject.We greatly valued the support received from the AHRC and from the journal Brain. The Sainsbury Centre for the Visual Arts, with its unique collection of art works from around the world, drawn from the full extent of human cultural history, was a wonderfully appropriate setting for our meeting. We hope that within a few weeks the pdfs of the slides used by our speakers are available on this website. We are extremely grateful to the speakers and members of the audience who travelled from around the world to join us. During the conference we grew into an exceptionally integrated community of specialists in the sciences and the humanities. Encouraged by an unprecedented sharing of knowledge and of methods of enquiry across our disciplines, we look forward to productive exchanges and collaborations in the future. Posters and presentations Document Adam Zeman – The Eye’s Mind: visual imagination neuroscience and the humanitities (4.55 MB / PDF) Document David Zagoury – The teratological imagination: Fantasia and the creation of monsters in Renaissance art theory (3.58 MB / PDF) Document Paul Worthington – The eye’s mind: Visual imaginations neuroscience and the humanities (1.11 MB / PDF) Document Crawford Winlove – Neural correlates of visual imagery (1.61 MB / PDF) Document Nuala Watt – Partial sight and poetic form (1003.6 KB / PDF) Document Maithilee Kunda – Visual imagination: A view from artificial intelligence (2.16 MB / PDF) Document Radu Leca – Spatial immersion through iconographic cues in seventeenth-century Japanese images (1.99 MB / PDF) Document Matthew MacKisack – Imagery from Ancient to Modern, and back (297.16 KB / PDF) Document Shaun May – Visual imagination in actor training (189.67 KB / PDF) Document Nick Watkins – (A)phantasia and SDAM: Personal, scientific and human perspectives (4.25 MB / PDF) Document Xiaoyan Hu – Painting as the image of mind (1.07 MB / PDF) Document Juliana Dresvina – What Julian saw: the re-examination of the bodily and ghostly sight in Julian of Norwich’s “Showings” (2.45 MB / PDF) Document Gyöngyvér Horváth – Visual imagination and the narrative image. The art historian’s approach (6.76 MB / THE ART HISTORIAN’S APPROACH) Document Renate Brosch – What we ‘see’ when reading literary narratives: Default visualisation and vivid images (454.51 KB / PDF) Document Susan Aldworth – The art of imagination (6.64 MB / PDF) Document Bence Nanay – Mental imagery in the perception of visual art (5.69 MB / PDF) Document Fiona Macpherson – Imagination and perception (1.44 MB / PDF) Session recordings Soundcloud playlist This article was published on 2025-09-10