This shows a head and musical notes.
The notion of a musician experiencing anauralia seems perplexing – how could you perform that role without being able to summon up sounds in your head? Credit: Neuroscience News

Soundless Minds: When the Mind Hears No Inner Voice

Summary: Some people experience anauralia, a silent mind incapable of imagining sounds like voices or music. Anauralia, often linked to aphantasia, affects about 1% of people, with no apparent drawbacks and potential attention benefits.

Key Facts:

  • Anauralia Defined: A silent mind incapable of imagining auditory sounds, often linked to aphantasia.
  • Creative Insight: Writers and musicians with hyperauralia or silent minds share unique perspectives.
  • Research Aim: Neuroimaging studies examine how silent or vivid inner sounds affect cognition.

Source: University of Auckland

Some people can’t imagine a dog barking or a police siren. Songs can’t get stuck in their heads. They have no inner voices.

‘Anauralia’ was proposed in 2021 by scientists from Waipapa Taumata Rau, University of Auckland to describe the little-known condition of a silent mind.

Now, as their investigations into the phenomenon continue, the University will host a global conference on sounds imagined in the mind, an event intended not just for scientists but also philosophers, musicians, poets and writers. ‘Mind’s Ear and Inner Voice’ will run from 14-16 April in Auckland.

Video Credit: Neuroscience News

“Scientists are fascinated by how the brain makes – or doesn’t make – imaginary sounds such as the inner voice,” says Professor Tony Lambert, of the School of Psychology.

“But for writers, musicians and poets, it can be a key part of the creative process, so they have insights to share, too.”

Charles Dickens said he heard his characters’ voices; Alice Walker, too. Some readers conjure up characters’ voices in their minds.

For University of Auckland student Sang Hyun Kim, who has a silent mind, the idea that other people are hearing imaginary voices can seem “freaky”, and he’ll be fascinated to see what research turns up about auditory imagery.

The conference hopes to include personal accounts from individuals who experience anauralia and hyperauralia, the experience of extremely vivid auditory imagery.

Some people say they can recreate a symphony in great detail in their minds. Others report weaker auditory imagery, and a small number report none.

In New Zealand, it’s estimated close to 1 percent of people experience anauralia, which is often accompanied by aphantasia, a lack of visual imagination. It seems there’s no downside to a silent mind; on the contrary, recent work suggests there may be an upside, involving improved attention.

The notion of a musician experiencing anauralia seems perplexing – how could you perform that role without being able to summon up sounds in your head?

“I don’t understand this either,” says Lambert. He surmises that the minds of such musicians may contain representations of music without the sensory qualities, akin to the difference between hearing music and music represented as a score.

“Overall, auditory imagery has attracted far less research attention than visual imagery,” says Lambert. “Our conference is unique in focusing on these issues from a strongly inter-disciplinary perspective.”

Lambert’s heightened interest in the area came after meeting Adam Zeman, the scientist who coined the term aphantasia, and after graduate students in the University’s PSYCH 721 Consciousness & Cognition paper noticed that scientific literature focused on visual imagery and largely ignored auditory imagery.  

“This got me thinking about the absence of auditory imagery.  Are there people who don’t imagine voices, music or other sounds? If so, how common is this? What are the psychological implications of experiencing a silent inner world? 

“We now have good answers to the first two questions,” he says. “The last question is a much larger one, but I believe we have made strong progress.”

The research underway in the University’s Anauralia Lab, supported by a grant from the Marsden Fund, includes a neuroimaging study combining high-density EEG, functional magnetic resonance imaging and electromyography of activity in muscles used for speech.

The line-up of keynote speakers at the conference from around the world includes experts on hearing voices – auditory verbal hallucinations – and in a field called cognitive literary studies. 

About this anauralia and auditory neuroscience research news

Author: Paul Panckhurst
Source: University of Auckland
Contact: Paul Panckhurst – University of Auckland
Image: The image is credited to Neuroscience News

Original Research: The findings will be presented at ‘Mind’s Ear and Inner Voice’

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  1. It’s all good until it suddenly happens to you later in Life. I remember I couldn’t locate anything about Anauralia for years before there was any data on it. I used to hear all sounds. “Stress” was an understatement and I still don’t know how to live with it or fully accept if this is the new life now while people assume I have a “problem”. I also don’t agree that what anyone hears in their heads is “imaginary” unless it’s anything other than your thoughts than that is imagined, but the way Anauralia happened to me–is certainly not imagined. I think everyone has some amount of ‘auditory decibel’ in their minds to hear themselves *Think*, it’s one of the ways to how one attracts things to their life. If this decibel goes to Zero, then that is a totally different approach. If you ever watch Yugioh, he plays a card called “Silent Magician”. I say it’s something like that. Performing great magical abilities without saying a single word.

  2. Silencing the inner voice is a first major step in meditation for spiritual growth.

    Put another way that voice or those pictures in your mind are static drowning out what you want to access. The access you want is both this piece of mind, and the ability to hear and understand the feeling of God.

    In other words as the Dalai Lama once surprisingly said, almost everyone in the world has mental health disease( is crazy), because they believe in imaginary things and listen to imaginary voices.

    What you think is reality is actually a dream that you have called into becoming your personal perception of reality.
    Different for most everyone and far off the mark.

    In my opinion.

  3. The exploration of anauralia and its connection to aphantasia opens up fascinating avenues for understanding the diverse ways in which human cognition operates. It is intriguing to see how individuals with silent minds can possess unique creative insights, demonstrating that our experiences of sound and silence can shape our perspectives in profound ways. This research not only highlights the complexity of the mind but also encourages us to appreciate the varied expressions of creativity that arise from different cognitive experiences. Let us continue to delve deeper into these mysteries, as they reveal the richness of human consciousness.

  4. I never knew I had Aphantasia until I was about 27.

    Once I discovered that it blew my mind. What blew my mind more was the realisation that if people actually can see images in their mind, and it’s not just a figure of speech. Then they must really mean the other senses they talk about that occur in their mind.

    I don’t have any of the inner world. No sight, sound, smells, touch, taste etc.

    I have adhd so while I have tried to fix my aphantasia I end up stopping. I did after months of meditation get 3 second flashes of images.

    Even more recently 2 maybe 3 times I managed to encourage such a fleeting moment of a sound in my head while trying to force it while imagining music. It was like wait did I just really hear it. It was wild.

  5. I guess I do have Hyperauralia. When I’m reading or writing I can hear every character, animal, the wind through the trees, the buzzing of a bee…, you name it. Not as an explosion of sounds but I ” get transported” to the place and moment and I can say I live thru it. I can’t wait for comments of April in Auckland

  6. I am thinking about how one would read with a silent mind. I think that research would be so interesting to see other methods of reading besides following a tiny voice in my head.

  7. I’m retired RN and I have both,can’t imagine having all the interruption by hearing and seeing ‘whatever’. I also see ‘faces’… Pareidolia. Hobbies include gardening, painting, carving modeling and molding.

  8. There’s a method of trying a few times to get your newsletter.Could you please use the email below?I’m very interested in brain studies.I’m hopefully getting some help with a grant and further in my education as a little bit of a older student to work on my graduate degrees.And I would appreciate more information from your organization.Do you have any physical magazines that could be mailed to me at a certain time

  9. As a psychotherapist, anauralia is so fascinating to me. I can’t comprehend it. I imagine people with this experience less struggles with mental health as rumination seems it would be impossible without an inner voice.

    As someone with aphantasia, I believe it likely creates barriers to certain types of treatment that utilize imagery, such as EMDR.

    I look forward to continued research into both topics.

  10. I find this very interesting
    I find most things of the mind very interesting
    Thank you for sharing

  11. As a musician, I do not need to hear music in my head to play. This is as long as ai can hear it with my ears, which does not require “playing sounds in my head.” I don’t think I could *write* music without the silent symphony and narrative (not always so silent). Others may have workarounds like the obes deaf musicians have.

    I would think not having a rich tapestry of thought and sound that I could easily imagine would absolutely constitute a drawback. l work so much out in my mind. I don’t think increased attention would be worth that trade.

    1. I hear you Nikki, since this Anauralia happened to me, it hasn’t affected how I play music. What I can say is that they way I play music now is like, ‘Everything of Me’ goes into that instrument. I can feel ‘The Savant’ come out. It’s an unusual feeling I’ve not felt prior to Anauralia. I am glad that this term exists now and that there are others out there. But externally, I still hear and interact with everything, it’s just like the Joker: “I can’t hear myself Think!” (DC’s Justice League) It’s still Silent, but they say “Silence is Gold” and “Speech is Silver”.

  12. So here’s my thought. If they were able to one day trigger this part of the brain, that could significantly help people who suffer from hearing voices and so on. Hmm, keep up thr awesome work, science world.

  13. Sight and sound both seem like the most useful to imagine, but what about smell, taste, touch, balance and temperature?

  14. Auditorial hallucinations are you not talking about this? The majority of humans have no iner though or can only think on sample terms they have to be told what to do every day dealing with these people is frustrating to say the least like Obama said paraphrasing all they know is there Bibles and their guns as far as I am concern they need to be eliminated . I do agree with parts of your theory.

  15. I can’t hear I music or inner voices in my head and I’m anaphantasic as well, which means I can’t see images in my head either. People say that that’s too bad for me, but is it? I don’t hear nagging voices driving me to feel guilty or do things I don’t want to do and I don’t relive trauma via vivid videos in my brain, like many of my friends do who can hear music, voices and see images in their mind. I’m very well balanced, and I never have bad dreams or nightmares. I’m a scientist, author and educator and very creative, playing several musical instruments. So it hasn’t affected me negatively it seems. Makes me wonder, who’s the lucky one?

  16. I actually cannot believe that, after learning that other people can see images when they close their eyes, it never occurred to me that, when people talk about an “inner voice”, they can, in fact, HEAR things in their minds!! So, now I’ve learned that, along with aphantasia, I also have anauralia. So, bipolar, major depressive disorder, and, I can’t even imagine music or movies to relax to. Still, maybe it’s made it that much less likely I could hallucinate…

  17. I would be interested in volunteering in your study. I’m quite sharp sharper than the average male. My age I’m 59 years old. Did 12 years of the United States army at M artistic? I create things build things. I do things that other people can’t do I can imagine things outside the box. I’m an adventure and I see the world different than everybody else. Does I’ll study sometimes? It tests my patients because my expectations. I know that’s not a good thing. But I, but I expect people to have a sixth grade education. At least you know, or be. Able to comprehend the words from which I’m speaking. And it seems like people nowadays are stupid and they don’t want to get any smarter. And they don’t want to learn on the average. Maybe I just need to hang out with smarter people. My name is Bryan Higgins. I’ll leave my contact information. I’m in San Antonio.

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