For the In the Mind's Eye blog.
Below is information on my new book. Soon more text and images will appear in the new blog called Seeing What Others Cannot See. Please have a look there. -- TGW.
From Prometheus Books, Amherst, NY, new book to be
published July 11, 2017 --
Seeing What Others Cannot See
The Hidden Advantages of Visual
Thinkers
and Differently Wired Brains
by Thomas G. West
For
over 25 years, Thomas G. West has been a leading advocate for the importance of
visual thinking, visual technologies and the creative potential of individuals
with dyslexia and other learning differences. In this new book, he investigates
how different kinds of brains and different ways of thinking can help to make
discoveries and solve problems in innovative and unexpected ways. West focuses
on what he has learned over the years from a group of extraordinarily creative,
intelligent and interesting people -- strong visual thinkers and those with
dyslexia, Asperger’s syndrome, and other different ways of thinking, learning
and working.
West
shows that such people can provide important insights often missed by experts and
professionals -- as they also can prevent institutional “group think.” Based on
first-person accounts, West tells stories that include a dyslexic
paleontologist in Montana, a special effects tech who worked for Pink Floyd and
Kiss and who is now an advocate for those with Asperger’s syndrome, a group of
dyslexic master code breakers in a British electronic intelligence
organization, a Colorado livestock handling expert who has become a forceful
advocate for those with autism and a family of visual thinkers and dyslexics in
Britain that includes four winners of the Nobel Prize in Physics. He also
discusses persistent controversies and the unfolding science.
This
is an inspiring book that not only documents the achievements of people with
various learning differences, but also reveals their great potential. This
potential is especially great in our new digital age where traditional clerical
and academic skills are less and less important -- while an ability to see the
big picture and to understand complex patterns revealed in high-level computer
information visualizations is rapidly increasing in value in the global
economic marketplace.
Thomas G. West is the author of the award-winning book In the Mind's Eye: Creative
Visual Thinkers, Gifted Dyslexics and the Rise of Visual Technologies and
the highly acclaimed Thinking like Einstein: Returning to Our Visual Roots
with the Emerging Revolution in Computer Information Visualization. In the
Mind’s Eye was awarded a gold seal and selected as one of the “best of the
best” for the year by the Association of College and Research Libraries of the
American Library Association. The book has been translated into Japanese,
Chinese and Korean -- and West has provided presentations for scientific,
medical, art, design, computer and business groups in the U.S. and 19 foreign
countries.
West
continues to lecture worldwide having given presentations to the Confederation
of British Industry in London, the Netherlands Design Institute in Amsterdam, a meeting of 50 Max Planck Institutes in
Göttingen, Germany, the Italian Dyslexia Association in Rome, the first
“Diversity Day” conference for the staff of GCHQ, the code-making and
code-breaking descendants of Bletchley Park (World War II code breakers), in Cheltenham,
England, scientists and artists at Green College and at Magdalen College within
Oxford University, England, the Royal College of Art in London, the Glasgow
School of Art in Scotland, a conference at the University of Uppsala before the
Queen of Sweden, the University of California at Berkeley, an education
conference sponsored by Harvard and MIT, the Arts Dyslexia Trust in London, an
education conference in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, and a meeting of visualization scientists and
artists sponsored by MIT and the Getty Museum in Los Angeles.
Other
presentations have included the Southwest Branch of the International Dyslexia
Association in Albuquerque, Santa Fe and Taos, New Mexico, the Learning Disability
Association of Taiwan, the international conference of computer graphic artists
and technologists (ACM-SIGGRAPH) in Vancouver, BC, Canada, the International
Symposium on Dyslexia in the Chinese Language organized by the Society of Child
Neurology and Developmental Pediatrics in Hong Kong, the U.S. National Library of
Medicine in Bethesda, Maryland, the Educational Testing Service in Princeton, New
Jersey, the Aspen Institute in Colorado, Pixar Animation Studios in Emeryville, California – and a Director's Colloquium
for scientists and staff of NASA Ames Research Center (at Moffett Field in
California’s Silicon Valley).
In November 2014, West was invited to give five
talks for the Dyslexia Association of Singapore as part of a year-long,
nation-wide effort to take advantage of the distinctive talents exhibited by dyslexic
children and adults. Long a leader in technological and commercial innovation,
Singapore plans to lead the world with this effort as well.
The
second edition of In the Mind’s Eye
includes a Foreword by the late Oliver Sacks, MD, who said “In
the Mind's Eye brings
out the special problems of people with dyslexia, but also their strengths,
which are so often overlooked. . . . It stands alongside Howard Gardner's Frames of Mind as a testament to the
range of human talent and possibility.” According to one reviewer: “Every once in a while a book
comes along that turns one's thinking upside down. In the Mind's Eye is just such a book.”
Contact:
thomasgwest@gmail.com. Distribution for Prometheus Books is provided by Penguin
Random House (www.penguinrandomhouse.com).
Note:
This is the draft introduction for the book by Thomas G. West: Seeing What Others Cannot See -- The Hidden
Advantages of Visual Thinkers and Differently Wired Brains (Prometheus
Books).
Introduction
Since my first book, In the Mind’s Eye, was published in
1991, I have had the privilege of providing presentations for many different
kinds of organizations in the U.S. and in nineteen foreign countries. In the process,
I have met and learned from, I like to say, some of the smartest, most creative
and most interesting people on the planet. Many of them are dyslexic or they
are, as described these days, “on the spectrum,” with Asperger syndrome or
other learning differences. Still others are merely very strong visual thinkers
-- people who habitually think in pictures (who may have troubles with words or
numbers).
With this book, I will draw
together some of the observations and stories that I have accumulated since In the Mind’s Eye was first published.
In the first book, I took a scholarly approach with a great many references and
notes to support my perspectives and arguments. With this book, I am taking a
very different approach. I will be focusing on brevity and simplicity -- using
a collection of short stories and excerpts, layering a world view with minimal
explanation and discussion.
I hope that these stories
and observations will help others to begin to see how important these visually
oriented capabilities are for high-level work in many fields -- and how little
they are understood and appreciated in traditional education and in
conventional measures of intelligence and ability. I make no claim to special
knowledge or expert status. I just want to share with visual thinkers and
different thinkers what I have learned in the hope that it will help them along
the way -- and in the hope that it might influence the direction of future
research and practice.
Some forward-looking
organizations have come to appreciate and value these visual capabilities, but
most educators and employers seem to be stuck in old ways of thinking. (The
psychologists say, “we have got it covered -- with our well-established
‘performance’ tests.” The artists, designers and visually oriented scientists
say, “no, you have not even begun to see what we see.”)
Over centuries, we have
built an academic system that relies mainly on words and numbers. However, we
are now living at a time when powerful visualization technologies, together
with emerging large-scale problems, are driving us toward a new realization of
how much we need to develop a new kind of thinking -- and how much we need the
kinds of people and the kinds of brains that have been marginalized in the past
by the dominant specialist culture, mostly based on proficiency with words
rather than images.
In the last few decades,
the world has changed in important ways. And it is changing once again. We need
to understand current trends and not be blinded by traditional beliefs and
practices. When we take the long view, the trend lines appear to be quite
obvious. But many professionals and experts are well trained to see and believe
what they were taught to believe decades ago. In a time of major change it is
really important to listen to people who can “see what others cannot see.”
When traveling with my
first book, I would talk with scientists, physicians, designers, artists,
inventors and others. They often made the remark that their dyslexic colleagues
had a different way of looking at things and “they could see things that others
could not see”-- whether in reference to an indefinite ultrasound or x-ray
image or regarding a novel surgical procedure or the solution to an enduring
scientific puzzle. At first, I came to believe that this capability was most
often characteristic of those dyslexics who were also strong visual thinkers.
Later, I was surprised to
hear the very same words used by an advocate talking to a group of high school
students with Asperger syndrome. In the same vein, another advocate had written
and discussed with me her own propensity to think in pictures -- seeing things
in her work that others did not notice or think were important. Indeed, she had
asked one researcher and writer, how do you think at all if you don’t see
pictures in your mind?
Over the years, I heard
similar observations hundreds of times in hundreds of different places.
Gradually, I came to see that I was dealing with a pattern of consequence, one
that many had observed in a variety of different fields. The cumulative effect
was that I was handed an intriguing topic -- and a book title -- that I could
no longer ignore.
It is apparent that visual
thinkers seem to experience the world differently from non-visual individuals
and other “neuro-typicals.” And this I believe, is a good thing -- although not
usually recognized as such, especially in the early years of education. I have
learned that for some people the easy things in primary school can be quite
hard -- while the hard things in graduate school and in advanced work
situations can be quite easy.
Over time, I have come to
realize that I have had the considerable advantage of gaining a special perspective
into remarkable parts of our world -- providing me with distinctive insights
into diverse and alternative ways of thinking, learning and working -- all
related, apparently, to observing things in a deeply original and perceptive
manner.
It is often noted that some
dyslexic scientists or entrepreneurs need only a brief mention of an idea or
concept. They don’t need to read the rest of the report. They just think about
it and all the implications and future problems and potentials become immediately
apparent. They do not need a painful elaboration of the obvious.
As always, I have continued
to rely mainly on stories and first-person accounts. I have come to trust them
more than many conventional academic theories and studies based on large-scale
surveys. I listen to what the affected individuals tell me. I believe they know
what they are talking about. They live it every day. And I believe it is
important to look at a whole individual life story to see how mixed strengths
and weaknesses manifest themselves through time in changing economic and social
circumstances. You can assemble the data and count the frequencies later; but
you first must look at the individual life story, like a good medical history,
to see the most important overall patterns. If you are mainly looking at many
people using the established conventional tests, you may be measuring and
counting the wrong things.
When one looks, as an
outsider, at a century or two of evolving conventional thinking, you can see
how often the winds have changed or have blown the wrong way. Looking back, it
is often easy to see who was on the right track from the beginning -- and how
long it has taken for the conventionally trained experts to abandon outdated
beliefs.
These observations are especially
true in regard to the different thinkers we focus on here. In a way, it is
self-evident. If you see what others do not see or cannot see -- most will say
that you are wrong or, in some way, a heretic. It is not pleasant for the
conventional experts to see threatened the material that they have been
teaching for many years -- or to have their books and articles suddenly become
outdated or irrelevant. It is always so.
These stories and first
person accounts have provided me with a set of primary sources that permit me
to gain insights perhaps rarely otherwise available – and I hope these will be of
interest to a wider audience. This approach is not unlike the style of the late
Oliver Sacks, M.D. -- who kindly provided a Foreword and blurb for the second
edition of In the Mind’s Eye.
Over these years, I have also
been fortunate to meet a number of individuals who were eager to tell me their
own life stories. Indeed, several individuals who have been at the very top of
their fields -- including, for example, one of the leading individuals in the
early development of modern molecular biology -- as well as a major figure in
the emerging specialist field of pediatric surgery. Both of these individuals contacted
me after reading my first book -- saying, in one way or another: “I read your
book. You understand how I think. Others do not. I want to tell you my story.”
I have been surprised at
the remarkable range of fields and occupations of those who have shown interest
in these topics -- including scientific, medical, art, design, computer and entrepreneurial
business groups. In many cases, attendees and contacts have shared with me
observations that were, apparently, not generally known -- and sometimes well
hidden.
In time, I found that these
observations seemed to fit into a larger pattern, acknowledging the value of
diverse minds and diverse brains – especially when this diversity is beginning
to be highly valued in a time of rapid technological change and global economic
competition. We are becoming more aware that we need something other than the conventional
clerks or strong test takers or traditional narrow specialists -- although our
educational system continues to train and select them.
Instead, I believe our very
survival may depend on strong visual thinkers and practically-minded
visionaries, those who think in different ways, those who see the larger
patterns, those who seem to be able to see over the horizon and predict what is
coming, those who naturally think in moving pictures by mental manipulation of
three-dimensional shapes and forms -- increasingly aided by the newest
integrative graphical computer technologies.
Remarkably, I have
continued to be surprised at the serious interest in these perspectives among the
most highly successful individuals. These individuals seem to immediately
understand that high creativity and capabilities are often linked to visual
thinking or to dyslexia, to Asperger syndrome or other learning differences. In
general, strangely, it seems that Nobel Prize winners are highly interested in
these perspectives -- whereas there appears to be very little interest among
most teachers, school psychologists and educational administrators. They might
find much more talent among their students if they knew how and where to look
for it.
In many respects, Asperger
syndrome (which I regard as still a useful term although some professional
groups have recently discontinued its use) appears to be the complete opposite
of developmental dyslexia. However, many individuals in both groups appear to
share a strongly visual manner of thinking, a link that is not always obvious
but could be extraordinarily important -- especially in an era when high-level
work in many fields increasingly involves “scientific visualization” and visual
analysis of complex information.
In addition to these
powerful trends, it appears that, historically, many of the most creative and
productive in regards to technological innovation and scientific discovery have
been strong visual thinkers. In contrast, it appears that many non-visual
thinkers may be very good at learning and applying old knowledge (and doing
well on exams, often getting the top grades and the top jobs) but may be very
poor at creating new knowledge or developing the broad and deep understanding
so badly needed for modern, real-world challenges. What spelled success in the
old specialist culture may very well generate major failures in the new.
In this book, I want to
focus mainly on visual thinking -- and its considerable power in many different
fields to understand relationships and novel solutions not often available in
other ways. Among computer graphics folks, words and numbers are seen as the
“thin pipe to the brain.” In contrast, they see computer graphics and
information visualization as “the fat pipe to the brain.” I hope that this book
will begin to illuminate what the “fat pipe” can do -- and how is changing the
fundamentals of our world.
Mostly, I will be looking
backward at some of what I have learned -- but I hope to look a little way
forward as well. As we know, for years computers have been taking over
low-level jobs. In more recent years, the newest and most powerful computers
have played into the hands of visually oriented different thinkers -- providing
powerful tools well suited to their mix of talents and special abilities.
However, the context is
changing once again. Now in the early days of “deep learning,” we can expect
shortly to see major effects on very high-level jobs as well. The machines are
now learning to see patterns that only high-level, experienced professionals
could see before. In some cases they have already surpassed human capabilities.
This has long been expected. But after several false starts, it appears that
the time has arrived. The effects are not yet entirely clear, but it is likely
that these trends may require the distinctive talents of “different thinkers”
once again. Then we will badly need to listen to those who “can see what others
cannot see.”
From the quotations page of
Seeing What Others Cannot See --
People with dyslexia
are often regarded as defective, as missing something—a facility in reading or
linguistic thinking—which the rest of us have. But those of us who are
predominantly verbal or “lexical” thinkers could just as well be thought of as
“avisuals.”
—Oliver Sacks, MD
I believe those of us with
Asperger’s are here for a reason, and we have much to offer.
—John Elder Robison
Dyslexia is Britain’s secret
weapon in the spy war: Top code breakers can crack complex problems. . . . Most
people only get to see the jigsaw picture when it’s nearly finished while the
dyslexic cryptographists can see what the jigsaw looks like with just two
pieces.
—Statement from GCHQ official,
July 2013
During residency, I recognized that
I had dyslexia. And then I realized I had this gift for imaging. Radiology is
where I belonged. I live in a world of patterns and images and I see things
that no one else sees. Anomalies jump out at me like a neon sign. . . . I do
have a gift that other people don’t have, and I will always stay ahead of the
crowd and see more in an image than other people.
—Beryl Benacerraf, MD
Many of the most exciting new
attempts to apply deep learning are in the medical realm. . . . While a
radiologist might see thousands of images in his life, a computer can be shown
millions. . . . “This image problem could be solved better by computers . . .
just because they can plow through so much more data than a human could ever
do.” The most remarkable thing about neural nets is that no human being has
programmed a computer to perform any of [these] stunts. . . . In fact, no human
being could. Programmers have, rather, fed the computer a learning algorithm,
exposed it to terabytes of data—hundreds of thousands of images or years’ worth
of speech samples—to train it, and have allowed the computer to figure out for
itself how to recognize the desired objects. . . . In short, such computers can
now teach themselves.
—Roger Parloff, Fortune magazine, October 2016
Draft
back cover copy for Seeing What Others
Cannot See by Thomas G. West
“For twenty-five years Thomas G. West has been
a leader in the movement to highlight the value and beauty of minds that see
the world in non-typical ways. In Seeing
What Others Cannot See, he presents his strongest case yet for the
importance of recognizing, educating, and utilizing nonverbal strengths, and
their special value in our contemporary world. Recommended for anyone
interested in cognitive psychology, neuroscience, innovation and creativity,
technology and education.”
—Brock
Eide, MD, coauthor of The Dyslexic Advantage and The Mislabeled Child
“In
this fascinating book, Thomas G. West revisits and interprets his earlier
theories in the light of ongoing changes in society, highlighting the
importance and awareness of positive aspects of dyslexia by contrast with
the traditional deficit approach. Here he extends his thinking to include a
novel evaluation of Asperger’s, drawing links between distinctive visual
thinkers in both groups in a series of compelling case studies. West
argues most persuasively for greater emphasis on the power of visual literacy
and the need for new tools to evaluate these strengths throughout life, to meet
the challenging demands of our modern environment.”
—Angela
Fawcett, PhD, editor, Asia Pacific
Journal of Developmental Differences and former editor Dyslexia. Emeritus Professor, Swansea University.
“People who think in pictures have contributed greatly to both
scientific discovery and artistic expression. Thomas G. West carefully
documents their abilities. Our education system needs to change from an
emphasis on deficits to the development of a student’s strengths.”
—Temple Grandin, PhD, author, Thinking
in Pictures and The Autistic Brain
“Thomas G. West argues convincingly that
dyslexics and related intellectuals seem to fail in elementary school learning
while excelling at the broader level of graduate school. Many whose stories he
recites were smashing successes in business. West urges that this is because of
extra gifts in visual learning and thinking. He goes beyond praising dyslexics’
hidden strengths in visual thinking and learning, their ability to see what
others cannot see—he demands that we stop hiding the imaginative strengths of
all children under their weaknesses in reading.”
—Donald Lindberg, MD, Director Emeritus,
National Library of Medicine
“In
Singapore, we have certainly met many individuals with dyslexia who have
talents that many do not see. Like Tom West, we would like everyone to
emphasize and develop the strengths of those with learning differences rather
than focus on their weaknesses. This is so that society can benefit from
the incredible gifts of those with dyslexia.”
-- Lee
Siang, CEO, Dyslexia Association of Singapore
Thomas G. West is the author of the
award-winning book In
the Mind’s Eye: Creative Visual Thinkers, Gifted Dyslexics and the Rise of
Visual Technologies, which was selected as an Outstanding Academic Title
and one of the “best of the best” for the year by Choice magazine, a publication of the
Association of College and Research Libraries division of the American Library
Association. He is also the author of Thinking
like Einstein: Returning to Our Visual Roots with the Emerging Revolution in
Computer Information Visualization. West lectures worldwide and has given
presentations to such institutions as the Confederation of British Industry;
the Netherlands Design Institute; the Max Planck Institutes in Gottingen,
Germany; the Educational Testing Service in Princeton, New Jersey; the Aspen
Institute in Colorado; Pixar Animation Studios in Emeryville, California; and
the NASA Ames Research Center.
Cover
image © arosoft/Shutterstock. Cover design by Liz Mills. Cover © Prometheus
Books.
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