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Synesthetic

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Other uses Synesthesia (also spelled synæsthesia or synaesthesia , plural synesthesiæ or synæsthesiæ ), from the ancient Greek lang|grc| wikt:s??|s?? (syn), "together," and lang|grc| wikt:a?s??s??|a?s??s?? (aisthesis), " wikt:sensation|sensation ," is a neurological condition in which stimulation of one sensory or cognitive pathway leads to automatic, involuntary experiences in a second sensory or cognitive pathway.cite book |first=Richard E. |last=Cytowic |title=Synesthesia: A Union of the Senses (2nd edition) |publisher= MIT Press |location= Cambridge, Massachusetts |year=2002 |pages= |isbn=0-262-03296-1 |oclc=49395033cite book |first=Richard E. |last=Cytowic |title=The Man Who Tasted Shapes |publisher= MIT Press |location= Cambridge, Massachusetts |year=2003 |pages= |isbn=0-262-53255-7 |oclc=53186027cite book|author=Cytowic, Richard E; Eagleman, David M|title=Wednesday is Indigo Blue: Discovering the Brain of Synesthesia (with an afterword by Dmitri Nabokov)|publisher= MIT Press |location=Cambridge |year=2009 |pages=309|isbn=0-262-01279-9 |Please check ISBN|reason=Check digit (9) does not correspond to calculated figure.cite book |first=John E. |last=Harrison |coauthors= Simon Baron-Cohen |title=Synaesthesia: classic and contemporary readings |publisher= Blackwell Publishing |location= Oxford |year=1996 |pages= |isbn=0-631-19764-8 |oclc=59664610 People who report such experiences are known as synesthetes.
Recently, difficulties have been recognized in finding an adequate definition of synesthesiacite journal |author=Nikolic D |title=Is synaesthesia actually ideaestesia? An inquiry into the nature of the phenomenon |journal=Proceedings of the Third International Congress on Synaesthesia, Science & Art, Granada, Spain, April 26-29 |year=2009 |url= http://www.danko-nikolic.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/09/Synesthesia2009-Nikolic-Ideaesthesia.pdfcite journal |author=Simner J |title=Defining synaesthesia |journal=British Journal of Psychology |volume=103 |issue=6 |pages=1–15 |year=2012, as many different phenomena have been covered by this term and in many cases the term synesthesia ("union of senses") seems to be a misnomer. A more accurate term for the phenomenon may be ideasthesia .

In one common form of synesthesia, known as grapheme-color synesthesia|grapheme ? color synesthesia or color-graphemic synesthesia, Letter (alphabet)|letter s or Numerical digit|numbers are perceived as inherently colored,cite journal |author=Rich AN, Mattingley JB |title=Anomalous perception in synaesthesia: a cognitive neuroscience perspective |journal= Nature Reviews Neuroscience |volume=3 |issue=1 |pages=43–52 |year=2002 |month=January |pmid=11823804 |doi=10.1038/nrn702 |url= cite journal |author=Hubbard EM, Ramachandran VS |title=Neurocognitive mechanisms of synesthesia |journal=Neuron |volume=48 |issue=3 |pages=509–20 |year=2005 |month=November |pmid=16269367 |doi=10.1016/j.neuron.2005.10.012 |url= http://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0896-6273(05)00835-4 while in ordinal linguistic personification , numbers, days of the week and months of the year evoke personalities.cite journal |author=Simner J, Holenstein E |title=Ordinal linguistic personification as a variant of synesthesia |journal=Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience |volume=19 |issue=4 |pages=694–703 |year=2007 |month=April |pmid=17381259 |doi=10.1162/jocn.2007.19.4.694 |url= http://www.mitpressjournals.org/doi/abs/10.1162/jocn.2007.19.4.694? url_ver=Z39.88-2003& rfr_id=ori:rid:crossref.org& rfr_dat=cr_pub%3dncbi.nlm.nih.gov |accessdate=2008-12-27cite journal |author=Smilek D, Malcolmson KA, Carriere JS, Eller M, Kwan D, Reynolds M |title=When "3" is a jerk and "E" is a king: personifying inanimate objects in synesthesia |journal= Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience |volume=19 |issue=6 |pages=981–92 |year=2007 |month=June |pmid=17536968 |doi=10.1162/jocn.2007.19.6.981 |url= http://www.mitpressjournals.org/doi/abs/10.1162/jocn.2007.19.6.981? url_ver=Z39.88-2003& rfr_id=ori:rid:crossref.org& rfr_dat=cr_pub%3dncbi.nlm.nih.gov |accessdate=2008-12-27 In spatial-sequence, or number form synesthesia, numbers, months of the year, and/or days of the week elicit precise locations in space (for example, 1980 may be "farther away" than 1990), or may have a (three-dimensional) view of a year as a map (clockwise or counterclockwise).cite journal |author=Galton F |title=Visualized Numerals |journal=Nature |volume=21 |issue= 543|pages=494–5 |year=1880 |month= |pmid= |doi= 10.1038/021494e0|url=cite journal |author=Seron X, Pesenti M, Noël MP, Deloche G, Cornet JA |title=Images of numbers, or "When 98 is upper left and 6 sky blue" |journal=Cognition |volume=44 |issue=1–2 |pages=159–96 |year=1992 |month=August |pmid=1511585 |doi=10.1016/0010-0277(92)90053-K |url=cite journal |author=Sagiv N, Simner J, Collins J, Brian Butterworth|Butterworth B , Ward J |title=What is the relationship between synaesthesia and visuo-spatial number forms? |journal=Cognition |volume=101 |issue=1 |pages=114–28 |year=2006 |month=August |pmid=16288733 |doi=10.1016/j.cognition.2005.09.004 |url= http://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0010-0277(05)00155-1 Yet another recently identified type, visual motion ? sound synesthesia, involves hearing sounds in response to visual motion and flicker.cite journal |author=Saenz M, Koch C |title=The sound of change: visually induced auditory synesthesia |journal= Current Biology |volume=18 |issue=15 |pages=R650–R651 |year=2008 |month=August |pmid=18682202 |doi=10.1016/j.cub.2008.06.014 |url= http://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0960-9822(08)00734-3 |accessdate=2008-12-28 Over 60 types of synesthesia have been reported,Day, Sean, Types of synesthesia. (2009) Types of synesthesia. Online: http://home.comcast.net/~sean.day/html/types.htm, accessed 18 February 2009. but only a fraction have been evaluated by scientific research.cite book |first=Cretien |last=van Campen |title=The Hidden Sense: Synesthesia in Art and Science |publisher= MIT Press |location= Cambridge, Massachusetts |year=2007 |pages= |isbn=0-262-22081-4 |oclc=80179991 Even within one type, synesthetic perceptions vary in intensitycite journal |author=Hubbard EM, Arman AC, Ramachandran VS, Boynton GM |title=Individual differences among grapheme-color synesthetes: brain-behavior correlations |journal=Neuron |volume=45 |issue=6 |pages=975–85 |year=2005 |month=March |pmid=15797557 |doi=10.1016/j.neuron.2005.02.008 |url= http://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0896-6273(05)00124-8 and people vary in awareness of their synesthetic perceptions.Campen, Cretien van (2009) "The Hidden Sense: On Becoming Aware of Synesthesia" TECCOGS, vol. 1, pp. 1-13. http://www.pucsp.br/pos/tidd/teccogs/artigos/pdf/teccogs_edicao1_2009_artigo_CAMPEN.pdf

While cross-sensory metaphor s (e.g., "loud shirt," "bitter wind" or "prickly laugh") are sometimes described as "synesthetic", true neurological synesthesia is involuntary. It is estimated that synesthesia could possibly be as prevalent as 1 in 23 persons across its range of variants.cite journal |author=Simner J, Mulvenna C, Sagiv N, et al. |title=Synaesthesia: the prevalence of atypical cross-modal experiences |journal=Perception |volume=35 |issue=8 |pages=1024–33 |year=2006 |pmid=17076063 |doi= 10.1068/p5469|url= Synesthesia runs strongly in families, but the precise mode of inheritance has yet to be ascertained. Synesthesia is also sometimes reported by individuals under the influence of psychedelic drug s, after a stroke , during a temporal lobe epilepsy seizure, or as a result of blindness or deafness . Synesthesia that arises from such non-genetic events is referred to as "adventitious synesthesia" to distinguish it from the more common congenital forms of synesthesia. Adventitious synesthesia involving drugs or stroke (but not blindness or deafness) apparently only involves sensory linkings such as sound ? vision or touch ? hearing; there are few, if any, reported cases involving culture-based, learned sets such as graphemes , lexemes , days of the week, or months of the year.

Although synesthesia was the topic of intensive scientific investigation in the late 19th century and early 20th century, it was largely abandoned by scientific research in the mid-20th century, and has only recently been rediscovered by modern researchers.cite journal |author=Campen C |title=Artistic and psychological experiments with synesthesia |journal=Leonardo |volume=32 |issue=1 |pages=9–14 |year=1999 |month= |pmid= |doi= 10.1162/002409499552948|url= Psychology|Psychological research has demonstrated that synesthetic experiences can have measurable behavioral consequences, while functional neuroimaging studies have identified differences in patterns of brain activation. Many people with synesthesia use their experiences to aid in their creative process, and many non-synesthetes have attempted to create works of art that may capture what it is like to experience synesthesia. Psychologists and neuroscientists study synesthesia not only for its inherent interest, but also for the insights it may give into cognitive and perceptual processes that occur in synesthetes and non-synesthetes alike.

Definitional criteria


Although sometimes spoken of as a "neurological condition," synesthesia is not listed in either the DSM-IV or the ICD classifications, since it most often does not interfere with normal daily functioning. It had, however, appeared for many years in both Dorland's and Stedman's medical dictionaries. Indeed, most synesthetes report that their experiences are neutral, or even pleasant.cite book |author=Sagiv, Noam; Robertson, Lynn C |title=Synesthesia: perspectives from cognitive neuroscience |publisher= Oxford University Press |location= Oxford |year=2005 |pages= |isbn=0-19-516623-X |oclc=53020292 Rather, like color blindness or perfect pitch , synesthesia is a difference in perceptual experience and the term "neurological" simply reflects the brain basis of this perceptual difference (see #Associated cognitive traits|below for associated cognitive traits).

It was once assumed that synesthetic experiences were entirely different from synesthete to synesthete, but recent research has shown that there are underlying similarities that can be observed when large numbers of synesthetes are examined together. For example, sound-color synesthetes, as a group, tend to see lighter colors for higher soundscite journal |author=Ward J, Huckstep B, Tsakanikos E |title=Sound-colour synaesthesia: to what extent does it use cross-modal mechanisms common to us all? |journal=Cortex |volume=42 |issue=2 |pages=264–80 |year=2006 |month=February |pmid=16683501 |doi= 10.1016/S0010-9452(08)70352-6|url= and grapheme-color synesthetes, as a group, share significant preferences for the color of each letter (e.g., A tends to be red; O tends to be white or black; S tends to be yellow etc.,cite journal |author=Simner J, Ward J, Lanz M, et al. |title=Non-random associations of graphemes to colours in synaesthetic and non-synaesthetic populations |journal=Cognitive Neuropsychology |volume=22 |issue=8 |pages=1069–1085 |year=2005 |pmid=21038290 |doi=10.1080/02643290500200122 |url=cite journal |author=Rich AN, Bradshaw JL, Mattingley JB |title=A systematic, large-scale study of synaesthesia: implications for the role of early experience in lexical-colour associations |journal=Cognition |volume=98 |issue=1 |pages=53–84 |year=2005 |month=November |pmid=16297676 |doi=10.1016/j.cognition.2004.11.003 |url= http://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0010-0277(04)00209-4). Nonetheless, there are a great number of types of synesthesia, and within each type, individuals can report differing triggers for their sensations, and differing intensities of experiences. This variety means that defining synesthesia in an individual is difficult, and the majority of synesthetes are completely unaware that their experiences have a name. However, despite the differences between individuals, there are a few common elements that define a true synesthetic experience.

Neurologist Richard Cytowic identifies the following diagnostic criteria of synesthesia:
# Synesthesia is involuntary and Automaticity|automatic .
# Synesthetic perceptions are spatially extended, meaning they often have a sense of "location." For example, synesthetes speak of "looking at" or "going to" a particular place to attend to the experience.
# Synesthetic percepts are consistent and generic (i.e., simple rather than pictorial).
# Synesthesia is highly Memory|memorable .
# Synesthesia is laden with affect (psychology)|affect .

Cytowic's early cases included individuals whose synesthesia was frankly projected outside the body (e.g., on a "screen" in front of one's face). Later research showed that such stark externalization occurs in a minority of synesthetes. Refining this concept, Cytowic and Eagleman differentiate between "localizers" and "non-localizers" to distinguish those synesthetes whose perceptions have a definite sense of spatial quality.

Experiences


Synesthetes often report that they were unaware their experiences were unusual until they realized other people did not have them, while others report feeling as if they had been keeping a secret their entire lives, as has been documented in interviews with synesthetes on how they discovered synesthesia in their childhood. The automatic and ineffable nature of a synesthetic experience means that the pairing may not seem out of the ordinary. This involuntary and consistent nature helps define synesthesia as a real experience. Most synesthetes report that their experiences are pleasant or neutral, although, in rare cases, synesthetes report that their experiences can lead to a degree of sensory overload .

Though often stereotyped in the popular media as a medical condition or neurological aberration, many synesthetes themselves do not perceive their synesthetic experiences as a handicap. To the contrary, most report it as a gift—an additional "hidden" sense—something they would not want to miss. Most synesthetes become aware of their "hidden" and different way of perceiving in their childhood. Some have learned how to apply this gift in daily life and work. Synesthetes have used their gift in memorizing names and telephone numbers, mental arithmetic, but also in more complex creative activities like producing visual art, music, and theater.

Despite the commonalities which permit definition of the broad phenomenon of synesthesia, individual experiences vary in numerous ways. This variability was first noticed early on in synesthesia researchcite book |author=Flournoy, Théodore |title=Des phénomènes de synopsie (Audition colorée) |publisher=Adamant Media Corporation |location= |year=2001 |pages= |isbn=0-543-94462-X |oclc= |doi= |accessdate= but has only recently come to be re-appreciated by modern researchers. Some grapheme ? color synesthetes report that the colors seem to be "projected" out into the world (called "projectors"), while most report that the colors are experienced in their "mind's eye" (called "associators").cite journal |author=Dixon MJ, Smilek D, Merikle PM |title=Not all synaesthetes are created equal: projector versus associator synaesthetes |journal=Cogn Affect Behav Neurosci |volume=4 |issue=3 |pages=335–43 |year=2004 |month=September |pmid=15535169 |doi= 10.3758/CABN.4.3.335|url= http://openurl.ingenta.com/content/nlm? genre=article& issn=1530-7026& volume=4& issue=3& spage=335& aulast=Dixon It is estimated that approximately one or two per hundred grapheme-color synesthetes are projectors; the rest are associators.

Additionally, some grapheme ? color synesthetes report that they experience their colors strongly, and show perceptual enhancement on the perceptual tasks described below, while others (perhaps the majority) do not, perhaps due to differences in the stage at which colors are evoked. Some synesthetes report that vowel s are more strongly colored, while for others consonant s are more strongly colored. In summary, self reports, autobiographical notes by synesthetes and interviews show a large variety in types of synesthesia, intensity of the synesthetic perceptions, awareness of the difference in perceiving the physical world from other people, the way they creatively use their synesthesia in work and daily life.Dittmar, A. (Ed.) (2007) Synästhesien. Roter Faden durchs Leben? Essen, Verlag Die Blaue Eule. The descriptions below give some examples of synesthetes' experiences, which have been experimentally tested, but do not exhaust their rich variety.

Various forms


Synesthesia can occur between nearly any two senses or perceptual modes, and at least one synesthete, Solomon Shereshevsky , experienced synesthesia that linked all five senses. Given the large number of forms of synesthesia, researchers have adopted a convention of indicating the type of synesthesia by using the following notation x ? y, where x is the "inducer" or trigger experience, and y is the "concurrent" or additional experience. For example, perceiving letters and numbers (collectively called grapheme s) as colored would be indicated as grapheme ? color synesthesia. Similarly, when synesthetes see colors and movement as a result of hearing musical tones, it would be indicated as tone ? (color, movement) synesthesia.

While nearly every logically possible combination of experiences can occur, several types are more common than others.

Grapheme ? color synesthesia


Main|Grapheme-color synesthesia
In one of the most common forms of synesthesia, grapheme ? color synesthesia, individual letters of the alphabet and numbers (collectively referred to as grapheme s), are "shaded" or "tinged" with a color . While different individuals usually do not report the same colors for all letters and numbers, studies with large numbers of synesthetes find some commonalities across letters (e.g., A is likely to be red).

As a child, Patricia Lynne Duffy|Pat Duffy told her father, "I realized that to make an R all I had to do was first write a P and draw a line down from its loop. And I was so surprised that I could turn a yellow letter into an orange letter just by adding a line." Another grapheme synesthete says, "When I read, about five words around the exact one I'm reading are in color. It's also the only way I can spell. In elementary school I remember knowing how to spell the word 'priority' with an "i" rather than an "e" because ... an 'e' was out of place in that word because 'e's were yellow and didn't fit."cite web |title=Slashdot Discussion |url= http://slashdot.org/comments.pl? sid=140022& cid=11726211 |date=2006-02-19 |accessdate=2006-08-14

Spatial Sequence Synesthesia


A special form of the condition, in which people tend to see all numerical sequences they come across as points in space. For instance, the number 1 might be farther away and the number 2 might be closer. A new study shows that those with SSS have superior memories. They were able to recall past events and memories far better, and in far greater detail than those without the condition.

Sound ? color synesthesia


According to Richard Cytowic, sound ? color synesthesia is "something like fireworks": voice, music, and assorted environmental sounds such as clattering dishes or dog barks trigger color and firework shapes that arise, move around, and then fade when the sound ends. For some, the stimulus type is limited (e.g., music only, or even just a specific musical key); for others, a wide variety of sounds triggers synesthesia.

Sound often changes the perceived hue, brightness, scintillation, and directional movement. Some individuals see music on a "screen" in front of their faces. Deni Simon, for whom music produces waving lines "like oscilloscope configurations – lines moving in color, often metallic with height, width and, most importantly, depth. My favorite music has lines that extend horizontally beyond the 'screen' area."

Individuals rarely agree on what color a given sound is (composers Franz Liszt|Liszt and Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov|Rimsky-Korsakov famously disagreed on the colors of music keys); however, synesthetes show the same trends as non-synesthetes do. For example, both groups say that Loudness|loud tones are brighter than soft tones, and that lower tones are darker than higher tones. Synaesthetes nevertheless choose more precise colours than non-synesthetes and are more consistent in their choice of colours given a set of sounds of varying pitch, timbre and composition.cite journal|last=Ward|first=J.|coauthors=Huckstep B., Tsakanikos E.|title=Sound-colour synaesthesia: To what extent does it use cross-modal mechanisms common to us all? Cortex, 42, 264-280.|journal=Cortex|year=2006|volume=42|issue=2|doi=10.1016/S0010-9452(08)70352-6|pmid=16683501|url= http://www.cortexjournal.net/article/S0010-9452(08)70352-6/abstract

Number form synesthesia


Main|Number form
A number form is a mental map of numbers, which automatically and involuntarily appears whenever someone who experiences number-forms thinks of numbers. Number forms were first documented and named by Francis Galton in "The Visions of Sane Persons".cite journal |author=Galton F |title=The visions of sane persons |journal=Fortnightly Review |volume=29 |issue= |pages=729–40 |year=1881 |month= |pmid= |doi= |url= http://www.galton.org/essays/1880-1889/galton-1881-fort-rev-visions-sane-persons.pdf |format=PDF|accessdate=2008-06-17 Later research has identified them as a type of synesthesia. In particular, it has been suggested that number-forms are a result of "cross-activation" between regions of the parietal lobe that are involved in numerical cognition|numerical cognition and spatial cognition.cite journal |author=Ramachandran VS and Hubbard EM |title=Synaesthesia: A window into perception, thought and language |journal=Journal of Consciousness Studies |volume=8 |issue=12 |pages=3–34 |year=2001 |month= |pmid= |doi= |url= http://psy.ucsd.edu/~edhubbard/papers/JCS.pdf |format=PDFcite journal |author=Hubbard EM, Piazza M, Pinel P, Dehaene S |title=Interactions between number and space in parietal cortex |journal=Nat. Rev. Neurosci. |volume=6 |issue=6 |pages=435–48 |year=2005 |month=June |pmid=15928716 |doi=10.1038/nrn1684 In addition to its interest as a form of synesthesia, researchers in numerical cognition have begun to explore this form of synesthesia for the insights that it may provide into the neural mechanisms of numerical-spatial associations present unconsciously in everyone.

Personification


Main|Ordinal linguistic personificationOrdinal-linguistic personification (OLP, or personification for short) is a form of synesthesia in which ordered sequences, such as ordinal number (linguistics)|ordinal number s, week-day names|days , months and Letter (alphabet)|letters are associated with personalities.cite journal |author=Simner J, Holenstein E |title=Ordinal linguistic personification as a variant of synesthesia |journal= Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience |volume=19 |issue=4 |pages=694–703 |year=2007 |month=April |pmid=17381259 |doi=10.1162/jocn.2007.19.4.694cite journal |author=Simner J, Hubbard EM |title=Variants of synesthesia interact in cognitive tasks: evidence for implicit associations and late connectivity in cross-talk theories |journal=Neuroscience |volume=143 |issue=3 |pages=805–14 |year=2006 |month=December |pmid=16996695 |doi=10.1016/j.neuroscience.2006.08.018 |url= http://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0306-4522(06)01092-X Although this form of synesthesia was documented as early as the 1890scite journal |author=Calkins MW |title=A Statistical Study of Pseudo-Chromesthesia and of Mental-Forms |journal=The American Journal of Psychology |volume=5 |issue=4 |pages=439–64 |year=1893 |month= |pmid= |doi= 10.2307/1411912 |publisher=University of Illinois Press|jstor=1411912 modern research has, until recently, paid little attention to this form.

For example, one synesthete says, "T’s are generally crabbed, ungenerous creatures. U is a soulless sort of thing. 4 is honest, but… 3 I cannot trust… 9 is dark, a gentleman, tall and graceful, but politic under his suavity." Likewise, Cytowic's subject MT says, "I is a bit of a worrier at times, although easy-going; J is male; appearing jocular, but with strength of character; K is female; quiet, responsible...."

For some people in addition to numbers and other ordinal sequences, objects are sometimes imbued with a sense of personality. Recent research has begun to show that alphanumeric personification co-varies with other forms of synesthesia, and is consistent and automatic, as required to be considered a form of synesthesia.

Lexical ? gustatory synesthesia


Main|Lexical-gustatory synesthesiaIn the rare lexical ? gustatory synesthesia, individual words and the phonemes of spoken language evoke taste sensations in the mouth. According to James Wannerton , "Whenever I hear, read, or articulate (inner speech) words or word sounds, I experience an immediate and involuntary taste sensation on my tongue. These very specific taste associations never change and have remained the same for as long as I can remember."

Jamie Ward and Julia Simner have extensively studied this form of synesthesia, and have found that the synesthetic associations are constrained by early food experiences.cite journal |author=Ward J, Simner J |title=Lexical-gustatory synaesthesia: linguistic and conceptual factors |journal=Cognition |volume=89 |issue=3 |pages=237–61 |year=2003 |month=October |pmid=12963263 |doi= 10.1016/S0010-0277(03)00122-7|url= http://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0010027703001227cite journal |author=Ward J, Simner J, Auyeung V |title=A comparison of lexical-gustatory and grapheme-colour synaesthesia |journal=Cognitive Neuropsychology |volume=22 |issue=1 |pages=28–41 |year=2005 |month= |pmid= 21038239|doi=10.1080/02643290442000022 |url= For example, James Wannerton has no synesthetic experiences of coffee or curry, even though he consumes them regularly as an adult. Conversely, he tastes certain breakfast cereals and candies that are no longer sold.

Additionally, these early food experiences are often paired with tastes based on the phonemes in the name of the word (e.g., /I/, /n/ and /s/ trigger James Wannerton’s taste of mince) although others have less obvious roots (e.g., /f/ triggers sherbet). To show that phonemes, rather than graphemes are the critical triggers of tastes, Ward and Simner showed that, for James Wannerton, the taste of egg is associated to the phoneme /k/, whether spelled with a "c" (e.g., accept), "k" (e.g., York), "ck" (e.g., chuck) or "x" (e.g., fax). Another source of tastes comes from semantic influences, so that food names tend to taste of the food they match, and the word "blue" tastes "inky."

Research history


Main|History of synesthesia research
The interest in colored hearing dates back to Greek antiquity, when philosophers asked if the color ( chroia , what we now call timbre) of music was a quantifiable quality.Gage, J. Colour and Culture. Practice and Meaning from Antiquity to Abstraction . (London:Thames & Hudson, 1993). Isaac Newton proposed that musical tones and color tones shared common frequencies, as did Goethe in his book, "Theory of Color." Despite this idea being false, there is a long history of building color organs such as the clavier à lumières on which to perform colored music in concert halls.Peacock, Kenneth. "Instruments to Perform Color-Music: Two Centuries of Technological Experimentation," Leonardo 21, No. 4 (1988) 397–406.Jewanski, J. & N. Sidler (Eds.). Farbe - Licht - Musik. Synaesthesie und Farblichtmusik. Bern: Peter Lang, 2006.

The first medical description of colored hearing is in a German 1812 thesis.Mahling, F. (1926) Das Problem der `audition colorée': Eine historisch-kritische Untersuchung. Archiv für die gesamte Psychologie, 57, 165–301. The father of psychophysics , Gustav Fechner reported the first empirical survey of colored letter photisms among 73 synesthetes in 1871,Fechner, Th. (1871) Vorschule der Aesthetik . Leipzig: Breitkopf und Hartel.Campen, Cretien van (1996). De verwarring der zintuigen. Artistieke en psychologische experimenten met synesthesie. Psychologie & Maatschappij , vol. 20, nr. 1, pp. 10–26. followed in the 1880s by Francis Galton .cite journal |author=Galton F |title=Visualized Numerals |journal=Nature |volume=21 |issue= 533|pages=252–6 |year=1880 |month= |pmid= |doi= 10.1038/021252a0|url=cite book |author=Galton F. |title=Inquiries into Human Faculty and Its Development |publisher=Macmillan |location= |year=1883 |pages= |isbn= |oclc= |doi= |url= http://galton.org/books/human-faculty/ |accessdate=2008-06-17 Research into synesthesia proceeded briskly in several countries, but due to the difficulties in measuring subjective experiences and the rise of behaviorism , which made the study of any subjective experience taboo, synesthesia faded into scientific oblivion between 1930 and 1980.

As the 1980s cognitive revolution began to make inquiry into internal subjective states respectable again, scientists once again looked to synesthesia. Led in the United States by Larry Marks and Richard Cytowic , and later in England by Simon Baron-Cohen and Jeffrey Alan Gray|Jeffrey Gray , research explored the reality, consistency, and frequency of synesthetic experiences. In the late 1990s, the focus settled on grapheme ? color synesthesia, one of the most common and easily studied types. Synesthesia is now the topic of scientific books and papers, Ph.D. theses, documentary films, and even novels.

Since the rise of the Internet in the 1990, synesthetes began contacting one another and creating Web sites devoted to the condition. These early grew into international organizations such as the American Synesthesia Association , the UK Synaesthesia Association , the Belgian Synaesthesia Association , the German Synesthesia Association and the Netherlands Synesthesia Web Community.

Prevalence and genetic basis


Early estimates of prevalence varied widely (from 1 in 20 to 1 in 20,000). These studies all had the methodological shortcoming of relying on self-selection , meaning individuals reporting their experience to investigators. Random population studies later determined that 1 in 23 individuals have some kind of synesthesia, while 1 in 90 have colored graphemes. Colored days of the week and colored graphemes are the most common types.

Many studies noted that synesthesia runs in families, consistent with a genetic origin for the condition. Francis Galton 's 1880 report noted a familial component. Studies from the 1990scite journal |author=Baron-Cohen S, Harrison J, Goldstein LH, Wyke M |title=Coloured speech perception: is synaesthesia what happens when modularity breaks down? |journal=Perception |volume=22 |issue=4 |pages=419–26 |year=1993 |pmid=8378132 |doi= 10.1068/p220419|url=cite journal |author=Baron-Cohen S, Burt L, Smith-Laittan F, Harrison J, Bolton P |title=Synaesthesia: prevalence and familiality |journal=Perception |volume=25 |issue=9 |pages=1073–9 |year=1996 |pmid=8983047 |doi= 10.1068/p251073|url= that noted a much higher prevalence in women than men (up to 6:1) most likely suffered from a Biased sample|sampling bias due to the fact that women are more likely to self-disclose than men. More recent random samples find an equal sex ratio of 1.1:1.

At first, the observed patterns of inheritance were consistent with an Sex linkage|X-linked mode of inheritance because there had been no verified reports of father-to-son transmission, whereas father-to-daughter, mother-to-son and mother-to-daughter transmission were readily observedcite journal |author=Ward J, Simner J |title=Is synaesthesia an X-linked dominant trait with lethality in males? |journal=Perception |volume=34 |issue=5 |pages=611–23 |year=2005 |pmid=15991697 |doi= 10.1068/p5250|url= However, the first genome-wide association study failed to find X-linkage,cite journal|author = Asher, JE, Lamb, JA, Brocklebank, D, et al. |title = A Whole-Genome Scan and Fine-Mapping Linkage Study of Auditory-Visual Synesthesia Reveals Evidence of Linkage to Chromosomes 2q24, 5q33, 6p12, and 12p12|journal = The American Journal of Human Genetics | volume = 84|issue = 2|pages= 1–7|year = 2009 | doi = 10.1016/j.ajhg.2009.01.012|url =|pmid = 19200526|pmc = 2668015 and furthermore verified two cases of father-to-son transmission.

Suggestive of incomplete gene penetrance is the situation of identical twins in which only one member of the pair is synesthetic,cite journal |author=Smilek D, Moffatt BA, Pasternak J, White BN, Dixon MJ, Merikle PM |title=Synaesthesia: a case study of discordant monozygotic twins |journal=Neurocase |volume=8 |issue=4 |pages=338–42 |year=2002 |pmid=12221147 |doi= 10.1076/neur.8.3.338.16194|url=cite journal |author=Smilek D, Dixon MJ, Merikle PM |title=Synaesthesia: discordant male monozygotic twins |journal=Neurocase |volume=11 |issue=5 |pages=363–70 |year=2005 |month=October |pmid=16251137 |doi=10.1080/13554790500205413 |url= http://www.informaworld.com/openurl? genre=article& doi=10.1080/13554790500205413& magic=pubmed and the observation that synesthesia can skip generations within a family.cite journal |author=Hubbard EM, Ramachandran VS |title=Refining the experimental lever: A reply to Shanon and Pribram |journal=Journal of Consciousness Studies |volume=10 |issue=3 |pages=77–84 |year=2003 |month= |pmid= |doi=|url= http://psy.ucsd.edu/~edhubbard/papers/Hubbard_JCS03.pdf|format=PDF It is furthermore common for family members to experience different types of synesthesia, suggesting that the gene(s) involved do not lead to invariably specific types of synesthesia. Developmental factors such as gene expression and environment must also play a role in determining which types of synesthesia an individual has (for example, children must interact with culturally learned artifacts such as alphabets and food names).

Objective verification


The simplest approach is test-retest reliability over long periods of time, where synesthetes consistently score much higher—around 90% after years, compared to 30–40% after just a month in non-synesthetes even when they are warned they will be retested—using stimuli of color names, color chips, or a computer-screen color picker providing 16.7 million choices.
Modified versions of the Stroop effect are popular. In the standard paradigm, it is harder to name the ink color of the word "red," for example, when it is printed in blue ink than when the ink is red. Similarly, if a grapheme ? color synesthete is shown the digit 4 (which he sees as red, say) in blue ink, he is slower to name the ink color than when it is printed in red. He sees the blue ink, but the same sort of conflict responsible for the standard Stroop effect occurs between the ink color and the automaticity|automatic synesthetic color of the grapheme. The conflict is strongest when the ink color is the opponent process|opponent color to the synesthetic one (e.g., red vs. green), indicating that synesthetic color perception uses the same mechanism as the perception of real colors.cite journal |author=Nikolic D, Lichti P, Singer W |title=Color opponency in synaesthetic experiences |journal=Psychol Sci |volume=18 |issue=6 |pages=481–6 |year=2007 |month=June |pmid=17576258 |doi=10.1111/j.1467-9280.2007.01925.x |url= http://www.blackwell-synergy.com/openurl? genre=article& sid=nlm:pubmed& issn=0956-7976& date=2007& volume=18& issue=6& spage=481

Cross-sensory Stroop tests are possible: for example, a music ? color synesthete must name a red swatch while listening to a sound that produces a blue sensation,cite journal |author=Ward J, Tsakanikos E, Bray A |title=Synaesthesia for reading and playing musical notes |journal=Neurocase |volume=12 |issue=1 |pages=27–34 |year=2006 |month=February |pmid=16517513 |doi=10.1080/13554790500473672 |url= http://www.informaworld.com/openurl? genre=article& doi=10.1080/13554790500473672& magic=pubmed or a musical key ? taste synesthete must identify a bitter taste while hearing a musical interval that tastes sweet .cite journal |author=Beeli G, Esslen M, Jäncke L |title=Synaesthesia: when coloured sounds taste sweet |journal=Nature |volume=434 |issue=7029 |pages=38 |year=2005 |month=March |pmid=15744291 |doi=10.1038/434038a Likewise, Stroop tests work even in those for whom merely thinking about a numeral elicits color. Take a person who sees 7 as yellow and 9 as blue, and make the task one of having to say a math solution out loud followed by naming a color square. In the illustration, having to answer "7" and then "yellow" is congruent with the subject’s synesthesia, which unconsciously primes him to respond faster than controls. The automatic blueness of 9, however, interferes with naming the green square, slowing him down compared to controls.

Synesthetic colors can also improve performance for some synesthetes. Inspired by tests for color blindness , Vilayanur S. Ramachandran|Ramachandran and Hubbard presented synesthetes and non-synesthetes with a matrix of 5s in which embedded 2s formed a hidden pattern such as a square, diamond, rectangle or triangle. For someone who sees 2s as red and 5s as green, for example, synesthetic colors help zero in on the embedded figure. Subsequent careful studies have found substantial variability among synesthetes in their ability to do this. It certainly does not happen instantaneously; while synesthesia is evoked very early in perceptual processing, it does not occur prior to attention .cite journal |author=Edquist J, Rich AN, Brinkman C, Mattingley JB |title=Do synaesthetic colours act as unique features in visual search? |journal=Cortex |volume=42 |issue=2 |pages=222–31 |year=2006 |month=February |pmid=16683496 |doi= 10.1016/S0010-9452(08)70347-2|url=cite journal |author=Sagiv N, Heer J, Robertson L |title=Does binding of synesthetic color to the evoking grapheme require attention? |journal=Cortex |volume=42 |issue=2 |pages=232–42 |year=2006 |month=February |pmid=16683497 |doi= 10.1016/S0010-9452(08)70348-4|url=

Possible neural basis


Main|Neural basis of synesthesia

Dedicated regions of the brain are specialized for given functions. Increased cross-talk between regions specialized for different functions may account for the many types of synesthesia. For example, the additive experience of seeing color when looking at graphemes might be due to cross-activation of the grapheme-recognition area and the color area called Visual cortex#V4|V4 (see figure). One line of thinking is that a failure to Synaptic pruning|prune synapses that are normally formed in great excess during the first few years of life may cause such cross-activation.

An alternate possibility is disinhibited feedback, or a reduction in the amount of inhibition along normally existing feedback pathways.cite journal |author=Grossenbacher PG, Lovelace CT |title=Mechanisms of synesthesia: cognitive and physiological constraints |journal=Trends Cogn. Sci. |volume=5 |issue=1 |pages=36–41 |year=2001 |month=January |pmid=11164734 |doi= 10.1016/S1364-6613(00)01571-0|url= http://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S1364-6613(00)01571-0 Normally, excitation and inhibition are balanced. However, if normal feedback were not inhibited as usual, then signals feeding back from late stages of multi-sensory processing might influence earlier stages such that tones could activate vision. Cytowic & Eagleman find support for the disinhibition idea in the so-called acquired forms of synesthesia that occur in non-synesthetes under certain conditions: Temporal lobe epilepsy , head trauma, stroke, and brain tumors. They also note that it can likewise occur during stages of meditation, deep concentration, sensory deprivation , or with use of Psychedelics, dissociatives and deliriants|psychedelics such as LSD or mescaline , or even, in some cases, marijuana . However, synesthetes report that common stimulant s, like caffeine and cigarette s do not affect the strength of their synesthesia, nor do alcoholic beverages .p. 137-140

Functional neuroimaging studies using positron emission tomography|PET and functional magnetic resonance imaging|fMRI demonstrate significant differences between the brains of synesthetes and non-synesthetes. fMRI shows V4 activation in both word ? color and grapheme ? color synesthetes.cite journal |author=Nunn JA, Gregory LJ, Brammer M, et al. |title=Functional magnetic resonance imaging of synesthesia: activation of V4/V8 by spoken words |journal=Nat. Neurosci. |volume=5 |issue=4 |pages=371–5 |year=2002 |month=April |pmid=11914723 |doi=10.1038/nn818cite journal |author=Sperling JM, Prvulovic D, Linden DE, Singer W, Stirn A |title=Neuronal correlates of colour-graphemic synaesthesia: a fMRI study |journal=Cortex |volume=42 |issue=2 |pages=295–303 |year=2006 |month=February |pmid=16683504 |doi= 10.1016/S0010-9452(08)70355-1|url= Diffusion tensor imaging allows visualization of white matter fiber pathways in the intact brain. This method demonstrates increased connectivity in fusiform gyrus , intraparietal sulcus and frontal cortex in grapheme-color synesthetes.cite journal |author=Rouw R, Scholte HS |title=Increased structural connectivity in grapheme-color synesthesia |journal=Nat. Neurosci. |volume=10 |issue=6 |pages=792–7 |year=2007 |month=June |pmid=17515901 |doi=10.1038/nn1906 The degree of white matter connectivity in the fusiform gyrus correlates with the intensity of the synesthetic experience.

The role of meaning


Main|Ideasthesia
Evidence has shown that concurrents in synesthesia may be operating at the level of the meaning of the stimulus (i.e. semantic representations), not at the level of the sensory inputs. For example, if presented with letter A, a synesthete would associated concurrent experiences only once the letter has been recognized and the meaning of the stimulus has been extracted. Hence, the basics for understanding synesthesia may be in the semantic structures that, uniquely for synesthetes, associate sensory-like experiences. It has been proposed that a more accurate definition of the phenomenon is within the context of ideasthesia .

Associated cognitive traits


Little is known about what, if any, cognitive traits might be associated with synesthesia. As early as 1980, Richard Cytowic first noted mild difficulties in left-right confusion , dyscalculia|arithmetic , and sense of direction. These observations await large-scale confirmation. What has been confirmed is elevated, sometimes eidetic memory|photographic , memory.cite journal |author=Smilek D, Dixon MJ, Cudahy C, Merikle PM |title=Synesthetic color experiences influence memory |journal=Psychological Science |volume=13 |issue=6 |pages=548–52 |year=2002 |month= |pmid= 12430840|doi=10.1111/1467-9280.00496 |url= It was reading Alexander Luria 's 1968 book The Mind of a Mnemonist that alerted Cytowic to the link between synesthesia and enhanced memory: Luria's subject had a 5-fold synesthesia that gave him extra hooks on which to hang and remember numerous facts.

Autism and epilepsy occur with synesthesia more often than chance predicts. Daniel Tammet , the savant who set a European record for reciting the digits of pi , has all three conditions indicating that they might share an underlying genetic cause. Synesthesia has so far been linked to a region on chromosome 2 that is associated with autism and epilepsy.

Synesthetes are likely to participate in creativity|creative activities.cite journal |author=Domino G |title=Synesthesia and Creativity in Fine Arts Students: An Empirical Look |journal=Creativity Research Journal |volume=2 |issue=1–2 |pages=17–29 |year=1989 |month= |pmid= |doi= 10.1080/10400418909534297|url=cite journal |author=Dailey A, Martindale C, Borkum J |title=Creativity, synesthesia, and physiognomic perception |journal=Creativity Research Journal |volume=10 |issue=1 |pages=1–8 |year=1997 |month= |pmid= |doi= 10.1207/s15326934crj1001_1|url= Individual development of perceptual and cognitive skills, and one's cultural environment likely determine the variety in awareness and practical use of synesthetic skills These are major topics of ongoing research.

Links with other areas of study


Researchers study synesthesia raising questions such as how the brain combines information from different sensory modalities, referred to as crossmodal perception and multisensory integration .


An example of this is the bouba/kiki effect . In an experiment first designed by Wolfgang Köhler , people are asked to choose which of two shapes is named bouba and which kiki. 95% to 98% of people choose kiki for the angular shape and bouba for the rounded one. Individuals on the island of Tenerife showed a similar preference between shapes called takete and maluma. Even 2.5 year-old children (too young to read) show this effect.cite journal |author=Maurer D, Pathman T, Mondloch CJ |title=The shape of boubas: sound-shape correspondences in toddlers and adults |journal=Dev Sci |volume=9 |issue=3 |pages=316–22 |year=2006 |month=May |pmid=16669803 |doi=10.1111/j.1467-7687.2006.00495.x |url= http://www.blackwell-synergy.com/openurl? genre=article& sid=nlm:pubmed& issn=1363-755X& date=2006& volume=9& issue=3& spage=316

Ramachandran and Hubbard suggest the kiki/bouba effect has implications for the evolution of language, because the naming of objects is not completely arbitrary. The rounded shape may intuitively be named bouba because the mouth makes a more rounded shape to produce that sound, while a more taut, angular mouth shape is needed to articulate kiki . The sound of K is also harder and more forceful than that of B. Such "synesthesia-like mappings" suggest that this effect might be the neurological basis for sound symbolism , in which sounds are non-arbitrarily mapped to objects and actions in the world.

Given synesthetes' extraordinary conscious experiences, researchers hope that their study will provide better understanding of consciousness and its neural correlate s, meaning what the brain mechanisms that make us conscious might be. In particular, synesthesia might be relevant to the philosophy|philosophical problem of qualia ,cite journal |author=Gray JA, Chopping S, Nunn J et al. |title=Implications of synaesthesia for functionalism: Theory and experiments |journal=Journal of Consciousness |volume=9 |issue=12 |pages=5–31 |year=2002 |month= |pmid= |doi= |url= given that synesthetes experience extra qualia (e.g., a colored sound).

Artistic investigations



Main|Synesthesia in art
The word "synesthesia" has been used for 300 years to describe very different things, from poetry and metaphor to deliberately contrived mixed-media applications such as son et lumière (show)|son et lumière shows or Polyester (film)|odorama . It is crucial to separate artists using synesthesia as an intellectual idea —pseudo-synesthetes such as Georgia O'Keeffe who used such titles as "Music-Pink and Blue"—from those who had the genuine perceptual variety, such as Wassily Kandinsky or Olivier Messiaen .

Synesthetic art historically refers to multi-sensory experiments in the genres of visual music , music visualization , audiovisual art , abstract film , and intermedia .cite journal |author=Berman G |title=Synesthesia and the Arts |journal=Leonardo |volume=32 |issue=1 |pages=15–22 |year=1999 |month= |pmid= |doi= 10.1162/002409499552957|url=cite book |author=Maur, Karin von |title=The Sound of Painting: Music in Modern Art (Pegasus Library) |publisher=Prestel |location=Munich |year=1999 |pages= |isbn=3-7913-2082-3 |oclc= |doi= |accessdate=cite book |author=Gage, John D. |title=Colour and culture: practice and meaning from antiquity to abstraction |publisher=Thames and Hudson |location=London |year=1993 |pages= |isbn=0-500-27818-0 |oclc= |doi= |accessdate=cite book |author=Gage, John D. |title=Color and meaning: art, science, and symbolism |publisher=University of California Press |location=Berkeley |year=1999 |pages= |isbn=0-520-22611-9 |oclc= |doi= |accessdate= Distinct from neuroscience, the concept of synesthesia in the arts is regarded as the simultaneous perception of multiple stimuli in one gestalt psychology|gestalt experience.Campen, Cretien van (2009) Visual Music and Musical Paintings. The Quest for Synesthesia in the Arts. In: F. Bacci & D. Melcher. Making Sense of Art, making Art of Sense. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Only recently can science verify and study synesthesia in artists; for deceased artists, one must interpret (auto)biographical information.

Synesthetic art can refer to either art created by synesthetes or art that attempts to convey the synesthetic experience. It is an attempt to understand the relation between the experiences of born synesthetes, non-synesthetes, and an appreciation of such art by both groups. These distinctions are not mutually exclusive given that art by a synesthete might also evoke synesthesia-like experiences in the viewer.

Contemporary synesthetic artists such as Carol Steen Steen, C. (2001). Visions Shared: A Firsthand Look into Synesthesia and Art, Leonardo, Vol. 34, No. 3, Pages 203–208 doi|10.1162/002409401750286949 and Marcia Smilack http://www.marciasmilack.com/synethesia-intro.php Marcia Smilack Website Accessed 20 Aug 2006. (a synesthetic photographer who waits until she gets a synesthetic response from what she sees, and then takes the picture,) have described in detail how they use their synesthesia to create their artworks. They demonstrate the complex interplay between personal experience and artistic creation.

Synesthesia has been a source of inspiration for artists, composers, poets, novelists, and digital artists. Vladimir Nabokov|Nabokov writes explicitly about synesthesia in several novels. Wassily Kandinsky|Kandinsky (a synesthete) and Mondrian (not a synesthete) both experimented with image-music correspondences in their paintings. Alexander Scriabin|Scriabin composed color music that was deliberately contrived and based on the circle of fifths , whereas Olivier Messiaen|Messiaen invented a new method of composition (the modes of limited transposition ) to specifically render his bi-directional sound-color synesthesia. For example, the red rocks of Bryce Canyon National Park|Bryce Canyon are depicted in his symphony Des canyons aux étoiles ("From the Canyons to the Stars"). New art movements such as literary symbolism, non-figurative art, and visual music have profited from experiments with synesthetic perception and contributed to the public awareness of synesthetic and multi-sensory ways of perceiving.

Literary depictions


Main|Synesthesia in literatureMain|Synesthesia in fiction
Synesthesia is sometimes used as a plot device or way of developing a character's inner life. Author and synesthete Patricia Lynne Duffy|Pat Duffy describes five ways in which synesthetic characters have been used in modern fiction.cite conference | author = Patricia Lynne Duffy| Duffy, P.L. | year = 2006 | title = Images of Synesthetes and their Perceptions of Language in Fiction | conference = 6th Annual Meeting of the American Synesthesia Association | url = http://www.synesthesia.info/florida.html | location = University of South Floridacite journal | author = Duffy, P.L. & Simner, J. | year = 2010 | title = Synaesthesia in fiction | journal = Cortex | volume = 46 | issue = | pages = 277–278 | doi = 10.1016/j.cortex.2008.11.003 | pmid = 19081086
# Synesthesia as Romanticism|Romantic ideal: in which the condition illustrates the Romantic ideal of transcending one's experience of the world. Books in this category include The Gift (Nabokov novel)|The Gift by Vladimir Nabokov .
# Synesthesia as pathology: in which the trait is pathological. Books in this category include The Whole World Over by Julia Glass .
# Synesthesia as Romantic pathology: in which synesthesia is pathological but also provides an avenue to the Romantic ideal of transcending quotidian experience. Books in this category include Holly Payne’s The Sound of Blue.
# Synesthesia as psychological health and balance: Painting Ruby Tuesday by Jane Yardley , and A Mango-Shaped Space by Wendy Mass .
#Synesthesia as Young Adult Literature and Science Fiction: Ultraviolet by R.J. Anderson

Many literary depictions of synesthesia are not accurate. Some say more about an author's interpretation of synesthesia than the phenomenon itself.

People with synesthesia


Main|List of people with synesthesiaDetermining synesthesia from the historical record is fraught with error unless (auto)biographical sources explicitly give convincing details.

Famous synesthetes include David Hockney , who perceives music as color, shape, and configuration, and who uses these perceptions when painting opera stage sets but not while creating his other artworks.see Cytowic, Richard E. 2002. Synesthesia: a Union of the Senses. Second edition. Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press, and Cytowic, R.E. & Eagleman, D.M. (2009) Wednesday is Indigo Blue." Cambridge: MIT Press Russian painter Wassily Kandinsky combined four senses: color, hearing, touch, and smell. Vladimir Nabokov describes his grapheme-color synesthesia at length in his autobiography, Speak, Memory and portrays it in some of his characters.Nabokov, Vladimir. 1966. Speak, Memory: An Autobiography Revisited . New York: Putnam. Composers include Duke Ellington ,Ellington, as quoted in George, Don. 1981. Sweet man: The real Duke Ellington. New York: G.P. Putnam’s Sons. Page 226. Franz Liszt ,Quoted from an anonymous article in the Neuen Berliner Musikzeitung (29 August 1895); quoted in'' Mahling, Friedrich. 1926. "Das Problem der 'Audition colorée: Eine historische-kritische Untersuchung." Archiv für die Gesamte Psychologie ; LVII Band. Leipzig: Akademische Verlagsgesellschaft M.B.H. Pp. 165–301. Page 230. Translation by Sean A. Day. Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov ,according to the Russian press: Yastrebtsev V. "On N.A.Rimsky-Korsakov's color sound- contemplation." Russkaya muzykalnaya gazeta , 1908, N 39–40, p. 842–845 (in Russian), cited by Bulat Galeyev (1999). and Olivier Messiaen , whose three types of complex colors are rendered explicitly in musical chord structures that he invented.see Samuel, Claude. 1994 (1986). Olivier Messiaen: Music and Color. Conversations with Claude Samuel. Translated by E. Thomas Glasow. Portland, Oregon: Amadeus Press. Physicist Richard Feynman describes his colored equations in his autobiography, What Do You Care What Other People Think? Feynman, Richard. 1988. What Do You Care What Other People Think? New York: Norton. P. 59.

Other notable synesthetes include musicians Billy Joel ,cite book | author = Seaberg, M. | year = 2011| title = Tasting the Universe | publisher = New Page Books | isbn = 978-1-60163-159-6p.& nbsp;89, 91 Itzhak Perlman ,p.& nbsp;53 Ida Maria ,cite news|url= http://entertainment.timesonline.co.uk/tol/arts_and_entertainment/music/article3404605.ece |title=Times Online interview|date=2008-02-24|author=Cairns, Dan|accessdate=2008-07-24|location=London|work=The Times Brian Chase cite news|url= http://www.guardian.co.uk/music/2009/mar/30/pop-music-yeah-yeah-yeahs|title=Emma Forrest meets New York's favourite art-punk rockers Yeah Yeah Yeahs|date=March 30, 2009|last=Forrest|first=Emma|work=guardian.co.uk|publisher= The Guardian |accessdate=2009-05-07|location=Londoncite web|url= http://site.yeahyeahyeahs.com/blog/brian.aspx|title=Brian Chase's blog|last=Chase|first=Brian|work=yeahyeahyeahs.com|accessdate=2009-05-07 Dead link|date=October 2010|bot=H3llBot and Patrick Stump ; actress Stephanie Carswell (credited as Stéphanie Montreux ); inventor Nikola Tesla ; electronic musician Richard D. James aka Aphex Twin (who claims to be inspired by lucid dream s as well as music); and classical pianist Hélène Grimaud . Founder of Pink Floyd , Syd Barrett , is thought to have had synesthesia. Harpist and fiddler Tina Larkin experiences Music/color synesthesia. Although it has not been verified, Pharrell Williams , of the groups The Neptunes and N.E.R.D. , claims to experience synesthesia,It just always stuck out in my mind, and I could always see it. I don't know if that makes sense, but I could always visualize what I was hearing... Yeah, it was always like weird colors." From a Nightline interview with Pharrell and to have used it as the basis of the album Seeing Sounds . Singer/songwriter Marina and the Diamonds experiences music ? color synesthesia, and reports colored days of the week. http://www.itv.com/lifestyle/loosewomen/videos/m/celebrityguests/marinaandthediamonds/ Loose Women | Marina and the Diamonds - ITV Lifestyle ITV - 27 April 2010 - Retrieved 28 April 2010.

Some artists frequently mentioned as synesthetes did not in fact have the condition. Alexander Scriabin 's 1911 Prometheus: Poem of Fire| Prometheus , for example, is a deliberate contrivance whose color choices are based on the circle of fifths and appear to have been taken from Madame Blavatsky .cite book |author=Dann, Kevin T. |title=Bright colors falsely seen: synaesthesia and the search for transcendental knowledge |publisher=Yale University Press |location=New Haven, Conn |year=1998 |pages= |isbn=0-300-06619-8 |oclc= |doi= |accessdate= The musical score has a separate staff marked luce whose "notes" are played on a color organ . Technical reviews appear in period volumes of Scientific American. On the other hand, his older colleague Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov (who was perceived as a fairly conservative composer), was in fact a synesthete.This is according to an article in the Russian press, Yastrebtsev V. "On N.A.Rimsky-Korsakov's color sound- contemplation." Russkaya muzykalnaya gazeta, 1908, N 39-40, p. 842-845 (in Russian), cited by Bulat Galeyev (1999).

French poets Arthur Rimbaud and Charles Baudelaire wrote of synesthetic experience but there is no evidence they were synesthetes themselves. Baudelaire's 1857 lang|fr|Correspondances ( http://www.doctorhugo.org/synaesthesia/baudelaire.html text available here) introduced the notion that the senses can and should intermingle. Baudelaire participated in a hashish experiment by psychiatrist Jacques-Joseph Moreau , and became interested in how the senses might correspond. Rimbaud later wrote Voyelles (1871) ( http://www.doctorhugo.org/synaesthesia/rimbaud.html text available here), which was perhaps more important than lang|fr|Correspondances in popularizing synesthesia, although he later boasted ''"J'inventais la couleur des voyelles!" I invented the colors of the vowels!.

In addition to being a natural mimic and polyglot, the lauded Cartoon-network voice actor, Brian Hamilton (actor)|Brian Hamilton , is a self-ascribed synesthete.

Daniel Tammet, a well known savant who wrote a book on his experiences with synesthesia called "Born on a blue day".

http://home.comcast.net/~sean.day/Synesthesia.htm Sean Day, synesthete and the President of the American Synesthesia Association , maintains a list of famous synesthetes, pseudosynesthetes, and non-synesthetes who used synesthesia in their art or music.

See also



  • Allochiria

  • Audiovisual art

  • Ideophone

  • Ideasthesia

  • Perception

  • Parosmia

  • Theory of multiple intelligences (using multiple senses)

  • Visual music

  • The Yellow Sound



  • References


    reflist|2

    Further reading


  • Simon Baron-Cohen|Baron-Cohen, S. and Harrison, J. (Eds., 1997). Synaesthesia: Classic and Contemporary Readings. Oxford: Blackwell Publishers. ISBN 0-631-19764-8.

  • Bosch, P. (2007) The Name of This Book is Secret Little, Brown Young Readers. ISBN 978-0-316-11366-3.

  • Bovi, O., Bocciolesi, E. (2010). "Dall'arte al cervello. Profili di un percorso interpretativo fra sinestesie ed emozioni." Perugia: Morlacchi University Press. ISBN 978-88-6074-274-2

  • Córdoba M.J. de, Riccò D. (et al.), Sinestesia. Los fundamentos teóricos, artísticos y científicos , Ediciones Fundación Internacional Artecittà, Granada 2012. ISBN 978-84-939054-1-5

  • Cretien van Campen|Campen, Cretien van . (2007) The Hidden Sense. Synesthesia in Art and Science. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press/Leonardo Books. ISBN 0-262-22081-4

  • Richard Cytowic|Cytowic, R.E. (2003) The Man Who Tasted Shapes. Cambridge: MIT Press ISBN 978-0-907845-43-0.

  • Richard Cytowic|Cytowic, R.E. (2002) Synesthesia: A Union of The Senses, second edition. Cambridge: MIT Press ISBN 978-0-262-03296-4.

  • Richard Cytowic|Cytowic, R.E. & David Eagleman|Eagleman, D.M. (2009) Wednesday is Indigo Blue: Discovering the Brain of Synesthesia, with an afterword by Dmitri Nabokov . Cambridge: MIT Press ISBN 978-0-262-01279-9.

  • Dann, K. (1998). Bright Colors Falsely Seen. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. ISBN 0-300-06619-8.

  • Patricia Lynne Duffy|Duffy, P. L. (2001). Blue Cats and Chartreuse Kittens: How Synesthetes Color their Worlds. New York: Henry Holt & Company. ISBN 0-7167-4088-5.

  • Harrison, J. (2001). Synaesthesia: The Strangest Thing. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-263245-0.

  • Jay, C. (2009) Breathing in Colour . Little, Brown. ISBN 978-0-7499-2978-7.

  • Marks L.E., The Unity of the Senses. Interrelations among the modalities , Academic Press, New York, 1978.

  • Riccò D., ''Sinestesie per il design. Le interazioni sensoriali nell'epoca dei multimedia , Etas, Milano, 1999. ISBN 88-453-0941-X

  • Riccò D., Sentire il design. Sinestesie nel progetto di comunicazione , Carocci, Roma, 2008. ISBN 978-88-430-4698-0

  • Robertson, L. and Sagiv, N. (Eds., 2005). Synesthesia: Perspectives from Cognitive Neuroscience. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-516623-X.

  • Rowedder, Anna K. (2009). Für Dich - For You - Pour Toi. Luxembourg: Synaisthesis. ISBN 978-9995962210Please check ISBN|reason=does not match hyphenation rules and is probably invalid.

  • Sinha, Jasmin (ed.). 2009. Synästhesie der Gefühle (Emotional Synaesthesia). Luxembourg: Synaisthesis. ISBN 978-9995962265Please check ISBN|reason=does not match hyphenation rules and is probably invalid.

  • Daniel Tammet|Tammet, D. (2006) Born on a Blue Day: A Memoir of Aspergers and an Extraordinary Mind. Hodder & Stoughton Ltd. ISBN 978-0-340-89974-8.

  • Tornitore T., ''Storia delle sinestesie. Le origini dell'audizione colorata , Genova, 1986.

  • Tornitore T., Scambi di sensi. Preistoria delle sinestesie , Centro Scientifico Torinese, Torino, 1988.

  • Wendy Mass|Mass, W. (2003) A Mango-Shaped Space. Little, Brown and Company. ISBN 0-316-52388-7

  • Ward, J. (2008) The Frog who croaked Blue: Synesthesia and the Mixing of the Senses. Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-43014-2.


  • External links


    Scientific resources


  • http://Cytowic.net/ Richard E. Cytowic Downloads, videos, and information.

  • David Eagleman 's http://www.synesthete.org/ Synesthesia Battery: take the test to see if you are synesthetic.

  • https://sites.google.com/site/bcmsynesthesiastudy/ Houston synesthesia study: Click here for more information.

  • http://www.synesthesie.nl Synesthetics by Cretien van Campen Artistic and scientific experiments, historical background.

  • http://www.sussex.ac.uk/synaesthesia/ Synaesthesia Research Group at the University of Sussex Information and article links.

  • http://leonardo.info/isast/spec.projects/synesthesiabib.html Synesthesia in Art and Science Bibliography compiled by Cretien van Campen for Leonardo/ISAST

  • http://www.bluecatsandchartreusekittens.com/Blue_Cats_and_Chartreuse_Kittens_Rel.html Blue Cats Resource Center by Patricia Lynne Duffy


  • Synesthesia associations


  • http://synesthesia.info/ American Synesthesia Association

  • http://www.synesthesia.com.au/ Australian Synaesthesia Association

  • http://www.doctorhugo.org/synaesthesia/index.htm Belgian Synesthesia Association

  • http://www.synaesthesia.ru Russian Synaesthesia Web-Community (Anton Dorso)

  • http://www.uksynaesthesia.com/ UK Synaesthesia Association

  • http://www.synaesthesie.org/ German Synaesthesia Association | Deutsche Synästhesie-Gesellschaft e.V.

  • http://www.synaesthesia.com synaesthesia.com: international synaesthesia community (synaesthesia-tests, workshops, Infos)


  • On the Web


  • http://www.mind-expanding-techniques.net/synesthesia.html Synesthesia: What it is and how to diagnose it.

  • http://blog.ted.com/2008/06/synesthesia_on_1.php TED Blog, including video links to Vilayanur S. Ramachandran|V. S. Ramachandran 's TED talk.

  • http://www.cytowic.net/? p=224 Cytowic's video lecture at the Smithsonian's Hirshhorn Museum Visual Music exhibit. Four-part YouTube version http://www.youtube.com/share? p=8297ECCEE1C02F65|here.

  • Scientific American article http://www.sciam.com/print_version.cfm? articleID=0003014B-9D06-1E8F-8EA5809EC5880000 Hearing Colors, Tasting Shapes ( http://web.archive.org/web/20080307193951/ http://psy.ucsd.edu/chip/pdf/SciAm_2003.pdf PDF version) by Ramachandran & Hubbard, May 2003.

  • Cretien van Campen|Campen, Cretien van (2009), http://web.archive.org/web/20110628222645/ http://www.pucsp.br/pos/tidd/teccogs/artigos/pdf/teccogs_edicao1_2009_artigo_CAMPEN.pdf The Hidden Sense: On Becoming Aware of Synesthesia, TECCOGS , vol. 1, pp.& nbsp;1–13.

  • http://www.synaisthesis.com: Synaisthesis Publishers, a Luxembourgish publishing house with focus on synaesthesia

  • http://www.researchchannel.org/prog/displayevent.aspx? rid=29222 Red Mondays and Gemstone Jalapeños: The Synesthetic World a documentary short featuring, featuring David Eagleman and four synesthetes, from ResearchChannel.


  • Category:Synesthesia|
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