Literature DB >> 16683495

Attentional load attenuates synaesthetic priming effects in grapheme-colour synaesthesia.

Jason B Mattingley1, Jonathan M Payne, Anina N Rich.   

Abstract

One of the hallmarks of grapheme-colour synaesthesia is that colours induced by letters, digits and words tend to interfere with the identification of coloured targets when the two colours are different, i.e., when they are incongruent. In a previous investigation (Mattingley et al., 2001) we found that this synaesthetic congruency effect occurs when an achromatic-letter prime precedes a coloured target, but that the effect disappears when the letter is pattern masked to prevent conscious recognition of its identity. Here we investigated whether selective attention modulates the synaesthetic congruency effect in a letter-priming task. Fourteen grapheme-colour synaesthetes and 14 matched, non-synaesthetic controls participated. The amount of selective attention available to process the letter-prime was limited by having participants perform a secondary visual task that involved discriminating pairs of gaps in adjacent limbs of a diamond surrounding the prime. In separate blocks of trials the attentional load of the secondary task was systematically varied to yield 'low load' and 'high load' conditions. We found a significant congruency effect for synaesthetes, but not for controls, when they performed a secondary attention-demanding task during presentation of the letter prime. Crucially, however, the magnitude of this priming was significantly reduced under conditions of high-load relative to low-load, indicating that attention plays an important role in modulating synaesthesia. Our findings help to explain the observation that synaesthetic colour experiences are often weak or absent during attention-demanding tasks.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16683495     DOI: 10.1016/s0010-9452(08)70346-0

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cortex        ISSN: 0010-9452            Impact factor:   4.027


  13 in total

1.  Grapheme-colour synaesthesia improves detection of embedded shapes, but without pre-attentive 'pop-out' of synaesthetic colour.

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Review 2.  Why we are not all synesthetes (not even weakly so).

Authors:  Ophelia Deroy; Charles Spence
Journal:  Psychon Bull Rev       Date:  2013-08

3.  Attention is required for the perceptual integration of action object pairs.

Authors:  Nicolas A McNair; Irina M Harris
Journal:  Exp Brain Res       Date:  2015-09-10       Impact factor: 1.972

4.  The interaction of synesthetic and print color and its relation to visual imagery.

Authors:  Bryan D Alvarez; Lynn C Robertson
Journal:  Atten Percept Psychophys       Date:  2013-11       Impact factor: 2.199

5.  The role of conceptual knowledge in understanding synaesthesia: Evaluating contemporary findings from a "hub-and-spokes" perspective.

Authors:  Rocco Chiou; Anina N Rich
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2014-02-19

6.  What spatial coordinate defines color-space synesthesia?

Authors:  Isabel Arend; Shiran Ofir; Avishai Henik
Journal:  Brain Cogn       Date:  2016-04-21       Impact factor: 2.310

7.  Chocolate smells pink and stripy: Exploring olfactory-visual synesthesia.

Authors:  Alex Russell; Richard J Stevenson; Anina N Rich
Journal:  Cogn Neurosci       Date:  2015-04-20       Impact factor: 3.065

8.  Implications of number-space synesthesia on the automaticity of numerical processing.

Authors:  Limor Gertner; Avishai Henik; Daniel Reznik; Roi Cohen Kadosh
Journal:  Cortex       Date:  2012-04-10       Impact factor: 4.027

9.  Event related potentials reveal that increasing perceptual load leads to increased responses for target stimuli and decreased responses for irrelevant stimuli.

Authors:  Chris Rorden; Chiara Guerrini; Rachel Swainson; Marco Lazzeri; Gordon C Baylis
Journal:  Front Hum Neurosci       Date:  2008-05-22       Impact factor: 3.169

10.  Components of Attention in Grapheme-Color Synesthesia: A Modeling Approach.

Authors:  Árni Gunnar Ásgeirsson; Maria Nordfang; Thomas Alrik Sørensen
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2015-08-07       Impact factor: 3.240

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