It turns out that blind individuals have excellent auditory memories. They encode auditory information more effectively than sighted individuals. They also are better serial list learners. They don't show primacy or recency effects but instead are able to create longer chunks or strings of associations among words (Raz et al., 2007). Some researchers believe that the fact that they do not use their visual cortex for visual input frees a good percentage of it for processing language and other auditory cues. As far as dreaming at night, which would typically draw on memory fragments from the previous waking hours (the "day's residue"), congenitally blind individuals who have never had access to sight are unlikely to have visual imagery in their dreams, but instead will hear sounds and experience other physical sensations. Individuals who became blind after the age of 5 or 6 sometimes are able to see images in their dreams. It does appear that blind individuals, congenital and non-congenital, do have rapid eye movements. I would imagine that David Paterson who is legally blind and retains some lingering sight would be able to have some forms of visual imagery in his dreams. Of course, the greatest vision he is going to need at the present time will be the moral and ethical foresight to rebuild the sense of trust and integrity that the citizens in New York deserve to feel about their governor.
- Home
- Find a Therapist
- Topics
- Tests
- Magazine
- Psych Basics
- Blogs
- Diagnosis Dictionary














