Literature DB >> 18823243

Seeing sounds and hearing colors: an event-related potential study of auditory-visual synesthesia.

Aviva I Goller1, Leun J Otten, Jamie Ward.   

Abstract

In auditory-visual synesthesia, sounds automatically elicit conscious and reliable visual experiences. It is presently unknown whether this reflects early or late processes in the brain. It is also unknown whether adult audiovisual synesthesia resembles auditory-induced visual illusions that can sometimes occur in the general population or whether it resembles the electrophysiological deflection over occipital sites that has been noted in infancy and has been likened to synesthesia. Electrical brain activity was recorded from adult synesthetes and control participants who were played brief tones and required to monitor for an infrequent auditory target. The synesthetes were instructed to attend either to the auditory or to the visual (i.e., synesthetic) dimension of the tone, whereas the controls attended to the auditory dimension alone. There were clear differences between synesthetes and controls that emerged early (100 msec after tone onset). These differences tended to lie in deflections of the auditory-evoked potential (e.g., the auditory N1, P2, and N2) rather than the presence of an additional posterior deflection. The differences occurred irrespective of what the synesthetes attended to (although attention had a late effect). The results suggest that differences between synesthetes and others occur early in time, and that synesthesia is qualitatively different from similar effects found in infants and certain auditory-induced visual illusions in adults. In addition, we report two novel cases of synesthesia in which colors elicit sounds, and vice versa.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2009        PMID: 18823243     DOI: 10.1162/jocn.2009.21134

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Cogn Neurosci        ISSN: 0898-929X            Impact factor:   3.225


  13 in total

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

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3.  Why Saturday could be both green and red in synesthesia.

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4.  Top-down signal transmission and global hyperconnectivity in auditory-visual synesthesia: Evidence from a functional EEG resting-state study.

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5.  Pathways to seeing music: enhanced structural connectivity in colored-music synesthesia.

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Review 7.  Sensory perception: lessons from synesthesia: using synesthesia to inform the understanding of sensory perception.

Authors:  Joshua Paul Harvey
Journal:  Yale J Biol Med       Date:  2013-06-13

8.  Pre-attentive modulation of brain responses to tones in coloured-hearing synesthetes.

Authors:  Lutz Jäncke; Lars Rogenmoser; Martin Meyer; Stefan Elmer
Journal:  BMC Neurosci       Date:  2012-12-14       Impact factor: 3.288

9.  Combined structural and functional imaging reveals cortical deactivations in grapheme-color synaesthesia.

Authors:  Erik O'Hanlon; Fiona N Newell; Kevin J Mitchell
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2013-10-30

10.  An extended case study on the phenomenology of sequence-space synesthesia.

Authors:  Cassandra Gould; Tom Froese; Adam B Barrett; Jamie Ward; Anil K Seth
Journal:  Front Hum Neurosci       Date:  2014-07-03       Impact factor: 3.169

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