That also made me realize that I, too, have several visualizations for numbers, all of which are perceived in slightly different ways. The visualizations for generic numbers as well as years mostly resemble sort of horizontal lines, though with many “layers”, which I can’t fully describe. The ones for hours in the day and months in a year are circles. Temperatures are a vertical line, with differing colors above and below 0 degrees Celsius.
The year timeline is probably the most interesting, as it has several regions: the 1990s look different from the 1980s or 2000s, but it’s hard to describe exactly how. The 1980s are pretty dark in color, with the 1990s much lighter. At 2001 there’s a kind of an association to images of 9/11 and the day when I heard about it. 2005-2006 has pictures of my siviilipalvelus period. Late 1930s up to 1945 have pictures of Europe and Germany, and 1945-1949 or so have pictures of Roswell/Area 51 and generic US Air Force bases. The time around 0 AD has pictures of the Mediterranean and Rome, while “the time of the dinosaurs” has pictures of the Earth from space. The future is kind of a grey fog. There are a bunch of other years with their own images as well.
There is a differing resolution in the timeline depending on how well I happen to know the period: for the 1990s and the WW2 period I can see each year separately, and they’re clearly marked, while e.g. the 1950-1980 period is much more indistinct.
At various points the timeline seems to head in different directions: the 1990s are left-to-right, the 1940s are right-to-left, and 0 AD is down-to-up. I don’t actually see the timeline making any sharp turns, however: the regions just gradually fade into each other.
Although the color matching is completely different from mine, it’s interesting to know that this kind of trait is not totally uncommon. Any guess about what’s originating it?
I honestly don’t remember, but it’s definitely a possibility. About testing this hypothesys… well we could create an army of baby clones and when they grow up we can still use them to conquer the world ;)
I also have colors associated to all kind of concepts: time periods, numbers, letters, tastes, music genres, even people.
E.g., my timeline is a ladder, where early universe era is dark blue, dinosaurs time is bright green, human prehistory is brown, 0 AD is yellow/orange and medieval times are light blue. Modern to contemporary era is detailed to a finer scale, e.g. the seventies are purple, the eighties are azure, nineties are yellow and 00s are white.
However, this is a very general thing: each time I recall some concept from my mind, my inner google also returns the color associated with it.
Whoa, that’s awesome.
That also made me realize that I, too, have several visualizations for numbers, all of which are perceived in slightly different ways. The visualizations for generic numbers as well as years mostly resemble sort of horizontal lines, though with many “layers”, which I can’t fully describe. The ones for hours in the day and months in a year are circles. Temperatures are a vertical line, with differing colors above and below 0 degrees Celsius.
The year timeline is probably the most interesting, as it has several regions: the 1990s look different from the 1980s or 2000s, but it’s hard to describe exactly how. The 1980s are pretty dark in color, with the 1990s much lighter. At 2001 there’s a kind of an association to images of 9/11 and the day when I heard about it. 2005-2006 has pictures of my siviilipalvelus period. Late 1930s up to 1945 have pictures of Europe and Germany, and 1945-1949 or so have pictures of Roswell/Area 51 and generic US Air Force bases. The time around 0 AD has pictures of the Mediterranean and Rome, while “the time of the dinosaurs” has pictures of the Earth from space. The future is kind of a grey fog. There are a bunch of other years with their own images as well.
There is a differing resolution in the timeline depending on how well I happen to know the period: for the 1990s and the WW2 period I can see each year separately, and they’re clearly marked, while e.g. the 1950-1980 period is much more indistinct.
At various points the timeline seems to head in different directions: the 1990s are left-to-right, the 1940s are right-to-left, and 0 AD is down-to-up. I don’t actually see the timeline making any sharp turns, however: the regions just gradually fade into each other.
.
Although the color matching is completely different from mine, it’s interesting to know that this kind of trait is not totally uncommon. Any guess about what’s originating it?
If you’re like me, you played with cube blocks as a child with colored numbers on them. I wonder how we’d go about testing that hypothesis.
I honestly don’t remember, but it’s definitely a possibility. About testing this hypothesys… well we could create an army of baby clones and when they grow up we can still use them to conquer the world ;)
.
I also have colors associated to all kind of concepts: time periods, numbers, letters, tastes, music genres, even people.
E.g., my timeline is a ladder, where early universe era is dark blue, dinosaurs time is bright green, human prehistory is brown, 0 AD is yellow/orange and medieval times are light blue. Modern to contemporary era is detailed to a finer scale, e.g. the seventies are purple, the eighties are azure, nineties are yellow and 00s are white.
However, this is a very general thing: each time I recall some concept from my mind, my inner google also returns the color associated with it.
Does it fall under the category of synesthesia?
You’re probably right! I wasn’t aware this was a known and reported condition.