I interviewed Kirsten Carlson, a PA Student at Francis Marion University, who is one of the few people that do not have an internal monologue. She does not h...
that would've been a great question for the video. I definitely have a strong internal monologue (sometimes even cumbersome) and I can play back entire songs I've heard in my head at will, with the correct tempo, notes, instrumentation, vocal range, etc. High fidelity. But I don't know if someone without an internal monologue could do this. They probably need to play it back. I think in some ways it might be better to not have one. What you lose out on in imagination you seem to gain in speed. Like the way the woman in the video described her ability to read quickly surprised me, as I've always been a slower reader, and can't read much faster than I can speak, since my internal monologue reads for me.
that would've been a great question for the video. I definitely have a strong internal monologue (sometimes even cumbersome) and I can play back entire songs I've heard in my head at will, with the correct tempo, notes, instrumentation, vocal range, etc. High fidelity. But I don't know if someone without an internal monologue could do this. They probably need to play it back. I think in some ways it might be better to not have one. What you lose out on in imagination you seem to gain in speed. Like the way the woman in the video described her ability to read quickly surprised me, as I've always been a slower reader, and can't read much faster than I can speak, since my internal monologue reads for me.