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Synesthesia.

2004
Abstract Owing to its bizarre nature and its implications for understanding how brains work, synesthesia has recently received a lot of attention in the popular press and motivated a great deal of research and discussion among scientists.
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Auditory-Olfactory Synesthesia Coexisting With Auditory-Visual Synesthesia

Journal of Neuro-Ophthalmology, 2012
Synesthesia is an unusual condition in which stimulation of one sensory modality causes an experience in another sensory modality or when a sensation in one sensory modality causes another sensation within the same modality. We describe a previously unreported association of auditory-olfactory synesthesia coexisting with auditory-visual synesthesia ...
Thomas E, Jackson   +1 more
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Swimming-style synesthesia

Cortex, 2011
The traditional and predominant understanding of synesthesia is that a sensory input in one modality (inducer) elicits sensory experiences in another modality (concurrent). Recent evidence suggests an important role of semantic representations of inducers.
Danko, Nikolić   +4 more
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Tactile-emotion synesthesia

Neurocase, 2008
We discuss experiments on two individuals in whom specific textures (e.g., denim, wax, sandpaper, silk, etc.) evoked equally distinct emotions (e.g., depression, embarrassment, relief, and contentment, respectively). The test/retest consistency after 8 months was 100%. A video camera recorded subjects' facial expressions and skin conductance responses (
V S, Ramachandran, David, Brang
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Synesthesia: When colors count

Cognitive Brain Research, 2005
A tacitly held assumption in synesthesia research is the unidirectionality of digit-color associations. This notion is based on synesthetes' report that digits evoke a color percept, but colors do not elicit any numerical impression. In a random color generation task, we found evidence for an implicit co-activation of digits by colors, a finding that ...
Knoch, D.   +3 more
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Synesthesia

2002
A biologically oriented introduction to synesthesia by the leading authority on the subject. For decades, scientists who heard about synesthesia hearing colors, tasting words, seeing colored pain just shrugged their shoulders or rolled their eyes.
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“Synesthesia”

Cahiers Charles V, 2000
Caponegro Mary. “Synesthesia”. In: Cahiers Charles V, n°29, décembre 2000. États-Unis : formes récentes de l’imagination littéraire (Travaux de l’Observatoire de Littérature Américaine -ODELA) pp. 257-260.
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Synesthesia and Language

2023
The term synesthesia (Greek syn ‘together’ and aisthēsis ‘sensation’; also spelled synaesthesia) is used to refer to two distinct phenomena, in different fields of research. In linguistics and in literary studies, synesthesia (henceforth, linguistic synesthesia) is a figure of speech in which linguistic expressions referring to different sensory ...
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SYNESTHESIA

2020
Jamie Ward, Julia Simner
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Synesthesia

2010
Michael M. Morgan   +199 more
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