There are a number of individuals whose extraordinary memory has been labeled "eidetic", but it is not established conclusively whether they use
mnemonics and other, non-eidetic memory-enhancement. "Sheldon Cooper" From the big bang theory sitcom is a very famous example of this. "Nadia", who began drawing realistically at the age of three, is autistic and has been closely studied. During her childhood, she produced highly precocious, repetitive drawings from memory, remarkable for being in perspective (which children tend not to achieve until at least adolescence) at the age of three, which showed different perspectives on an image she was looking at. For example, at the age of three, she was obsessed with horses: after seeing a horse in a story book, she generated images of what a horse should look like in any posture. She could draw other animals, objects, and parts of human bodies accurately, but represented human faces as jumbled forms. Others have not been thoroughly tested, though savant
Stephen Wiltshire can look at a subject once and then produce, often before an audience, an accurate and detailed drawing of it, and has drawn entire cities from memory, based on single, brief helicopter rides; his six-metre drawing of 305 square miles of New York City is based on a single twenty-minute helicopter ride. Another less thoroughly investigated instance is the art of
Winnie Bamara, an Australian indigenous artist of the 1950s. ==See also==