نتایج جستجو برای: synaesthesia

تعداد نتایج: 410  

Journal: :Current Biology 2005

2015
Beat Meier Nicolas Rothen

Synaesthesia is a variation of human experience that involves the automatic activation of unusual concurrent experiences in response to ordinary inducing stimuli. The causes for the development of synaesthesia are not well understood yet. Synaesthesia may have a genetic basis resulting in enhanced cortical connectivity during development. However, in some cases synaesthesia has a sudden onset, ...

Journal: :Perception 2010
Nicolas Rothen Beat Meier

Synaesthesia may facilitate the expression of creativity. Therefore synaesthetes may be more common in the world of creative art. To test this possibility, we used behavioural and phenomenological measures to assess the existence of grapheme-colour synaesthesia in a sample of art students (N = 99) and a control sample (N = 96). We found a prevalence of about 7% in the former and about 2% in the...

2016
Simon Baron-Cohen Emma Robson Meng-Chuan Lai Carrie Allison

Research has linked Mirror-Touch (MT) synaesthesia with enhanced empathy. We test the largest sample of MT synaesthetes to date to examine two claims that have been previously made: that MT synaesthetes (1) have superior empathy; and (2) only ever experience their MT synaesthesia in response to viewing a person being touched. Given that autism has been suggested to involve deficits in cognitive...

2016
Nourhan Zayed

Synathesia is a condition in which stimulation of a sensory modality triggers another sensation in the alike or an unalike sensory modality. Currently, synaesthesia is deemed a neurological condition that engages unwanted transfer of signals between brain regions from one sense to another “crosstalk activation”. The probability that undiagnosed synaesthesia may impact the results of structural ...

Journal: :Quarterly journal of experimental psychology 2007
Caroline Yaro Jamie Ward

Some individuals with superior memory, such as the mnemonist Shereshevskii (Luria, 1968), are known to have synaesthesia. However, the extent to which superior memory is a general characteristic of synaesthesia is unknown, as is the precise cognitive mechanism by which synaesthesia affects memory. This study demonstrates that synaesthetes tend to report subjectively better than average memory a...

2013
Anja Moos

Synaesthesia is an unusual phenomenon, in which additional sensory perceptions are triggered by apparently unrelated sensory or conceptual stimuli. The main foci of this presentation lie in vowel sound colour and voice-induced synaesthesia. While grapheme-colour synaesthesia has been intensively researched using various methodologies (neurological studies, extensive interviews, and behavioural ...

Journal: :Cortex; a journal devoted to the study of the nervous system and behavior 2006
Julian E Asher Michael R F Aitken Nasr Farooqi Sameer Kurmani Simon Baron-Cohen

Synaesthesia, a neurological condition affecting approximately .05% of the population, is characterised by anomalous sensory perception: a stimulus in one sensory modality triggers an automatic, instantaneous, consistent response in another modality (e.g., sound evokes colour) or in a different aspect of the same modality (e.g., black text evokes colour). As evidence was limited to case studies...

Journal: :Consciousness and cognition 2017
Marcus R Watson Jan Chromý Lyle Crawford David M Eagleman James T Enns Kathleen A Akins

According to one theory, synaesthesia develops, or is preserved, because it helps children learn. If so, it should be more common among adults who faced greater childhood learning challenges. In the largest survey of synaesthesia to date, the incidence of synaesthesia was compared among native speakers of languages with transparent (easier) and opaque (more difficult) orthographies. Contrary to...

Journal: :Neuroscience and biobehavioral reviews 2012
Nicolas Rothen Beat Meier Jamie Ward

People with synaesthesia show an enhanced memory relative to demographically matched controls. The most obvious explanation for this is that the 'extra' perceptual experiences lead to richer encoding and retrieval opportunities of stimuli which induce synaesthesia (typically verbal stimuli). Although there is some evidence for this, it is unlikely to be the whole explanation. For instance, not ...

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