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A systematic, large-scale study of synaesthesia: implications for the role of early experience in lexical-colour associations

Cognition, 2005
For individuals with synaesthesia, stimuli in one sensory modality elicit anomalous experiences in another modality. For example, the sound of a particular piano note may be 'seen' as a unique colour, or the taste of a familiar food may be 'felt' as a distinct bodily sensation.
Rich, AN, Bradshaw, JL, Mattingley, JB
exaly   +5 more sources

Associating Colours with People: A Case of Chromatic-Lexical Synaesthesia

open access: yesCortex, 2001
Synaesthesia is a condition in which a sensory experience normallyassociated with one modality occurs when another modality is stimulated(Baron-Cohen and Harrison 1997). The commonest form of synaesthesia iscolour-word synaesthesia, which is subdivided into a chromatic-graphemic type(the dominant letter in a word induces a letter-specific colour ...
P H, Weiss   +4 more
openaire   +3 more sources

Lexical-gustatory synaesthesia: linguistic and conceptual factors

Cognition, 2003
This study documents an unusual case of developmental synaesthesia, in which speech sounds induce an involuntary sensation of taste that is subjectively located in the mouth. JIW shows a highly structured, non-random relationship between particular combinations of phonemes (rather than graphemes) and the resultant taste, and this is influenced by a ...
Jamie, Ward, Julia, Simner
openaire   +3 more sources

A comparison of lexical-gustatory and grapheme-colour synaesthesia

Cognitive Neuropsychology, 2005
This study compares two different profiles of synaesthesia. One group (N = 7) experiences synaesthetic colour and the other (N = 7) experiences taste. Both groups are significantly more consistent over time than control subjects asked to generate analogous associations.
Ward, J, Simner, J, Auyeung, V
openaire   +3 more sources

Tasty non-words and neighbours: The cognitive roots of lexical-gustatory synaesthesia

Cognition, 2009
For lexical-gustatory synaesthetes, words trigger automatic, associated food sensations (e.g., for JB, the word slope tastes of over-ripe melon). Our study tests two claims about this unusual condition: that synaesthetic tastes are associated with abstract levels of word representation (concepts/lemmas), and that the first tastes to crystallise in ...
Julia, Simner, Sarah L, Haywood
openaire   +3 more sources

The neural basis of illusory gustatory sensations: Two rare cases of lexical–gustatory synaesthesia

Journal of Neuropsychology, 2011
Lexical–gustatory synaesthesia is a rare phenomenon in which the individual experiences flavour sensations when they read, hear, or imagine words. In this study, we provide insight into the neural basis of this form of synaesthesia using functional neuroimaging.
Jones, C. L.   +5 more
openaire   +4 more sources

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