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Synesthesia

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Title: Synesthesia


1
Synesthesia
  • Patricia Averill, C. Dillon Martin Hall

2
Presentation Outline
  • Description
  • Definition
  • Types, common and otherwise
  • Population prevalence
  • Theories
  • Historical Theories
  • Neural correlates for Synesthesia
  • Evidence for Synesthesia as an ASC
  • Neuroimaging
  • Pop-out Effects
  • Further Discussion

3
Synesthesia Defined
  • A neurological condition where an observed
    stimulus in one sensory modality is involuntarily
    associated with a particular stimulus in another
    sensory modality
  • For Example
  • 1 2 3 4 5 etc...
  • Jan (11 oclock), Feb (12), etc...
  • Robert (apple pie), Jane (orange juice)

4
Types of Synesthesia
  • Grapheme Color
  • Letters/Numbers on a page appear to be shaded by
    or are associated with specific colors
  • One of the more common forms
  • No consistency for grapheme/color associations
    across synesthetes

5
Types of Synesthesia
  • Grapheme Color

6
Types of Synesthesia
  • Grapheme Color
  • "I was sitting with my family around the dinner
    table and I don't know why I said it but I said,
    "The number five is yellow." There was a pause
    and my father said, "No, it's yellow-ochre." And
    my mother and brother looked at us like, 'this is
    a new game, would you share the rules?' I was
    dumbfounded. So I thought, "Well." At that time
    in my life I was having trouble deciding whether
    the number two was green and the number six blue,
    or the other way around. And I said to my father,
    "Is the number two green?" and he said, "Yes,
    definitely. It's green." Then he took a long look
    at my mother and brother and became very
    quiet.    Thirty years after that, he came to my
    house and said, "you know, the number four is
    red, and the number zero is white. And," he said,
    "the number nine is green." I said, "Well, I
    agree with you about the four and the zero, but
    nine is definitely not green!"

7
Types of Synesthesia
  • Music Color
  • Tones or other aspects of musical notes (key,
    timbre, etc.) are associated with specific colors
  • Less common than G C
  • Some consistency across synesthetes, as higher
    notes appear to be more brightly colored

8
Types of Synesthesia
  • Music Color

9
Types of Synesthesia
  • Music Color
  • " The sounds of musical instruments will
    sometimes make me see certain colors, about a
    yard in front of me, each color specific and
    consistent with the particular instrument
    playing a piano, for example, produces a
    sky-blue cloud in front of me, and a tenor
    saxophone produces an image of electric purple
    neon lights"-SD

10
Types of Synesthesia
  • Lexical Gustatory
  • Words and names are associated with a taste or
    combinations of tastes
  • Rare
  • Rhyming and syntactic associations common enough
    to be occasionally predictable (e.g. Tony
    Macaroni, or Blue Inky flavor)

11
Types of Synesthesia
  • Lexical Gustatory

Absolute - Tangerines Gallery - White
Chocolate Register - Pork Pie Filling Academy
- Thin Chocolate Bar Rent - Cabbage Accept - Egg
Yolk, Hard Require - Milk, Condensed Acid - Acid
Drops Gate - Bacon, Cold Reservations - Mars
Bar Acquire - Milk, Condensed Gillian
- Tongues Reserve  - Mars Bar   Acrobat - Choc.
biscuit thick  Glad - Potato, Sliced Adams
- Tomatoes, Tinned Glasgow  -  Milk Admit
- Smarties Global - Pear Drops Reveal - Meat
Jelly, Cold Adrian - Watery, Incomplete Go - Meat
Loaf Reward - Turkish Delight Adventure - Mashed
vegetables Good - Custard Risk - Milky Advert
- Beef Burgers Gordon - Dirt Robert - Jam
Sandwiches Grab - Bacon, Thick Robin - Jam
Sandwiches Advice -CarrotsGreat -Grapes Roger
- Pork Pie Filling Aeroplane - Chocolate,
Dark Greed - Cabbage Rope - Bread Crust Grimsby
- Fruit Gum, Horrible Ross - Cornflakes, mlk
sgr Grip - Grape Skin Route - Pickled
Beetroot Ago - Meat Loaf Group - Grape Agree
- Cabbage Guess - wafer biscuits Safety - Toast
lightly butterd



?







12
Prevalence of Synesthesia
  • Early Data
  • between 1 in 20 and 1 in 20,000
  • Questionable collection methods relying on
    self-reporting
  • Recent Data
  • Prevalence of 1 in 23 suggested by random
    population study
  • Simner et al

13
Prevalence of Synesthesia
  • Tends to cluster in families
  • Strongly suggests genetic origin
  • Likely X-linked, as no father-to-son
    transmission ever recorded
  • Slightly more common in women than in men
  • 1.1 1 ratio, Simner et al

14
Historical Theories about Synesthesia
  • Is it learned?
  • once suggested that colored fridge magnets caused
    a learned association
  • doesnt explain forms other than Grapheme
    Color
  • Doesnt explain historical accounts before the
    prevalence of colored fridge magnets

15
Historical Theories about Synesthesia
  • Is it just an overly vivid imagination?
  • As with all ASCs, difficult to tell apart from
    actual subjective experience
  • Test- retest reliability
  • Synesthetes 90 over one year
  • Non-synesthetes 30-40
  • Stroop Effect

16
Two Main Types Of Synesthesia
  • Lower Level
  • Fusiform Gyrus
  • Higher Level
  • Angular Gyrus

17
Lower Level Synesthesia
18
Higher Level Synesthesia
19
Low Level Synesthesia Pop-Out Effects
20
Low Level Synesthesia Pop-Out Effects
21
Other Effects
  • Lower the Contrast
  • Colorblind Synesthetes
  • Roman Numerals (A Concept)
  • Higher level synesthetes will see 5 in the same
    color as the Roman numeral V
  • For lower level synesthetes, the Roman numeral
    will not appear in color

5 and V
For Example
22
Fusiform GyrusThe Cross Activation Hypothesis
23
Angular GyrusConcept Metaphor
24
Booba Kiki Experiment
25
Synesthesia as an Altered State?
  • Lack of Pruning (Selectively or Globally)
  • Artists and Poets
  • Greater prevalence among them
  • Relation to metaphor?
  • Schizophrenics

26
LSD
  • The threshold dosage level for an effect on
    humans is of the order of 20 to 30 µg (LSD is
    extremely potent)
  • Doses can be as high as 1,200 µg but higher doses
    come with the increased risk of bad trips
  • LSD affects a large number of the G protein
    coupled receptors, including all dopamine
    receptor subtypes, all adrenoreceptor subtypes
    and most serotonin receptor subtypes
  • Initially used for psychotherapy

27
Sensory Effects of LSD
  • Users experience Synesthesia
  • LSD does not produce hallucinations in the
    strict sense, but instead illusions and vivid
    daydream-like fantasies.
  • Visual Effects
  • movement of static surfaces (walls breathing)
  • geometric patterns and an intensification of
    colors and brightness
  • Schizophrenics do not experience the effects of
    LSD

28
Alternate States and Additional Questions
  • Could LSD be the gateway to the synesthesiac
    experience/consciousness?
  • Are synesthetes experiencing the world at a
    level of consciousness different from the rest of
    us?
  • Do we all have synesthesia at some level?
  • Booba/Kiki
  • Metaphor
  • What about schizophrenics
  • they lack the ability to comprehend metaphor
  • they do not experience the synesthesic effects
    of LSD

29
Sources
  • Ramachandran, V. S. E. M. Hubbard (2001),
    "Synaesthesia A window into perception, thought
    and language", Journal of Consciousness Studies
    8(12) 3-34
  • Simner, J. C. Mulvenna N. Sagiv et al. (2006),
    "Synaesthesia The prevalence of atypical
    cross-modal experiences", Perception 8(35)
    1024-1033
  • Wannerton, J. I., The World of Synaesthesia,
    http//www.wannerton.net/
  • Synesthesia - Wikipedia, http//en.wikipedia.org/w
    iki/Synesthesia
  • Ramachandran, V. S. and Hubbard, Ed (2003),
    Hearing Colors, Tasting Shapes, Scientific
    American, Vol 288 Issue 5 (May 2003), 42-49.
  • Ramachandran, V. S. and Hubbard, E.M. (2001).
    Psychophysical investigations in to the neural
    basis of synaesthesia. Proceedings of the Royal
    Society, 268, 979-983.
  • Ramachandran, V. S., Lecture,
    http//www.nyas.org/ebriefreps/ebrief/000500/prese
    ntations/ramachandran/player.html
  • Duffy, P. L. (2001). Blue Cats and Chartreuse
    Kittens How Synesthetes Color their Worlds. New
    York Henry Holt Company
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