ABSTRACT
Psychological science-as opposed to behavioral and cognitive science-is concerned with other
people’s subjective experience, including visual sensations of the dream experience. Generally, the
psychologist studying other people’s visual experience reduces it either to their ratings of their
subjective experience on a psychometric scale or to their verbal description of their subjective
experience. And generally, the richness of the other mind’s subjective visual experience is lost in the
reduction. The two goals of our psychological experiment are to capture the richness of other people’s
visually imagined sensations, by investigating purely visual aspects of our art students’ digitized dreams,
and to uncover correlations between those visual aspects of the digitized dreams and various aspects of
the students’ personalities and emotions.