نتایج جستجو برای: synesthesia

تعداد نتایج: 704  

Journal: :The European journal of neuroscience 2016
Simon Lacey Margaret Martinez Kelly McCormick K Sathian

Synesthesia is a phenomenon in which an experience in one domain is accompanied by an involuntary secondary experience in another, unrelated domain; in classical synesthesia, these associations are arbitrary and idiosyncratic. Cross-modal correspondences refer to universal associations between seemingly unrelated sensory features, e.g., auditory pitch and visual size. Some argue that these phen...

2012
Aleksandra Mroczko-Wąsowicz Markus Werning

Synesthesia is traditionally regarded as a phenomenon in which an additional non-standard phenomenal experience occurs consistently in response to ordinary stimulation applied to the same or another modality. Recent studies suggest an important role of semantic representations in the induction of synesthesia. In the present proposal we try to link the empirically grounded theory of sensory-moto...

Journal: :Trends in cognitive sciences 2001
P G. Grossenbacher C T. Lovelace

Synesthesia is a conscious experience of systematically induced sensory attributes that are not experienced by most people under comparable conditions. Recent findings from cognitive psychology, functional brain imaging and electrophysiology have shed considerable light on the nature of synesthesia and its neurocognitive underpinnings. These cognitive and physiological findings are discussed wi...

2014
Rocco Chiou Anina N. Rich

Synesthesia is a phenomenon in which stimulation in one sensory modality triggers involuntary experiences typically not associated with that stimulation. Inducing stimuli (inducers) and synesthetic experiences (concurrents) may occur within the same modality (e.g., seeing colors while reading achromatic text) or span across different modalities (e.g., tasting flavors while listening to music). ...

2001
Gail Martino Lawrence E. Marks

In this review, we distinguish strong and weak forms of synesthesia. Strong synesthesia is characterized by a vivid image in one sensory modality in response to stimulation in another one. Weak synesthesia is characterized by cross-sensory correspondences expressed through language, perceptual similarity, and perceptual interactions during information processing. Despite important phenomenologi...

Journal: :Journal of cognitive neuroscience 2007
Roi Cohen Kadosh Kathrin Cohen Kadosh Avishai Henik

The neuronal correlate of a rare explicit bidirectional synesthesia was investigated with numerical and physical size comparison tasks using both functional magnetic resonance imaging and event-related potentials. Interestingly, although participant I.S. exhibited similar congruity effects for both tasks at the behavioral level, subsequent analyses of the imaging data revealed that different br...

Journal: :Neuron 2005
Edward M. Hubbard V. S. Ramachandran

Synesthesia is a condition in which stimulation of one sensory modality causes unusual experiences in a second, unstimulated modality. Although long treated as a curiosity, recent research with a combination of phenomenological, behavioral, and neuroimaging methods has begun to identify the cognitive and neural basis of synesthesia. Here, we review this literature with an emphasis on grapheme-c...

2007
Romke Rouw Steven Scholte

Diffusion tensor imaging allowed us to validate for the first time the hypothesis that hyperconnectivity causes the added sensations in synesthesia. Grapheme-color synesthetes (n = 18), who experience specific colors with particular letters or numbers (for example, ‘R is sky blue’), showed greater anisotropic diffusion compared with matched controls. Greater anisotropic diffusion indicates more...

Journal: :Trends in cognitive sciences 2009
David M Eagleman Melvyn A Goodale

Synesthesia is a perceptual phenomenon in which stimuli can trigger experiences in non-stimulated sensory dimensions. The literature has focused on forms of synesthesia in which stimuli (e.g. music, touch or numbers) trigger experiences of color. Generally missing, however, is the observation that synesthetic colors are often accompanied by the experience of other surface properties such as tex...

Journal: :Annals of neurology 2007
Jamie Ward

Synesthesia is the automatic elicitation of conscious perceptual experiences by stimuli not normally associated with such experiences (eg, tasting words, hearing colors). The stimuli that induce synesthesia can be either cognitive (eg, thinking of a number) or sensory (eg, listening to music). Synesthesia can be either developmental in origin (present throughout the life span, with a hereditary...

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