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Perception, 2011
Synaesthetic inducers such as graphemes are typically cultural artifacts. Thus, a learning component seems evident in synaesthesia (Simner et al, 2009 Brain132 57 – 64). Normally, synaesthetes report to have their experiences since they can remember. Nevertheless, a recent training study suggests that synaesthesia can be mimicked in non-synaesthetes ...
Nicolas, Rothen +2 more
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Synaesthetic inducers such as graphemes are typically cultural artifacts. Thus, a learning component seems evident in synaesthesia (Simner et al, 2009 Brain132 57 – 64). Normally, synaesthetes report to have their experiences since they can remember. Nevertheless, a recent training study suggests that synaesthesia can be mimicked in non-synaesthetes ...
Nicolas, Rothen +2 more
openaire +2 more sources
Journal of Mental Science, 1955
Synaesthesia is defined by Vernon (1937) as a phenomenon in which “a stimulus presented in one mode seems to call up imagery of another mode as readily as that of its own”. The discovery of synaesthesia has sometimes been wrongly attributed to Galton.
L, SIMPSON, P, McKELLAR
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Synaesthesia is defined by Vernon (1937) as a phenomenon in which “a stimulus presented in one mode seems to call up imagery of another mode as readily as that of its own”. The discovery of synaesthesia has sometimes been wrongly attributed to Galton.
L, SIMPSON, P, McKELLAR
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Mirror-sensory synaesthesia: Exploring ‘shared’ sensory experiences as synaesthesia
Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews, 2012Recent research suggests the observation or imagination of somatosensory stimulation in another (e.g., touch or pain) can induce a similar somatosensory experience in oneself. Some researchers have presented this experience as a type of synaesthesia, whereas others consider it an extreme experience of an otherwise normal perception. Here, we present an
Bernadette M, Fitzgibbon +5 more
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2001
Abstract Synaesthesia is a confusion of the senses, whereby stimulation of one sense triggers stimulation in a completely different sensory modality. A synaesthete might claim to be able to hear colours, taste shapes, describe the colour, shape, and flavour of someone's voice, or music, the sound of which looks like 'shards of glass ...
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Abstract Synaesthesia is a confusion of the senses, whereby stimulation of one sense triggers stimulation in a completely different sensory modality. A synaesthete might claim to be able to hear colours, taste shapes, describe the colour, shape, and flavour of someone's voice, or music, the sound of which looks like 'shards of glass ...
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British Journal of Psychology. General Section, 1934
LORRIN A. RIGGS, THEODORE KARWOSKI
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LORRIN A. RIGGS, THEODORE KARWOSKI
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2016
Saggio sulla produzione artistica di Stefano Canto e sulle relazioni tra poetiche espressive dell'artista e poetiche del paesaggio.
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Saggio sulla produzione artistica di Stefano Canto e sulle relazioni tra poetiche espressive dell'artista e poetiche del paesaggio.
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