| Literature DB >> 26715523 |
Maki Sakamoto1, Junji Watanabe2.
Abstract
Many languages have a word class whose speech sounds are linked to sensory experiences. Several recent studies have demonstrated cross-modal associations (or correspondences) between sounds and gustatory sensations by asking participants to match predefined sound-symbolic words (e.g., "maluma/takete") with the taste/texture of foods. Here, we further explore cross-modal associations using the spontaneous production of words and semantic ratings of sensations. In the experiment, after drinking liquids, participants were asked to express their taste/texture using Japanese sound-symbolic words, and at the same time, to evaluate it in terms of criteria expressed by adjectives. Because the Japanese language has a large vocabulary of sound-symbolic words, and Japanese people frequently use them to describe taste/texture, analyzing a variety of Japanese sound-symbolic words spontaneously produced to express taste/textures might enable us to explore the mechanism of taste/texture categorization. A hierarchical cluster analysis based on the relationship between linguistic sounds and taste/texture evaluations revealed the structure of sensation categories. The results indicate that an emotional evaluation like pleasant/unpleasant is the primary cluster in gustation.Entities:
Keywords: cross-modal perception; drinks; emotional evaluation; sound symbolism; spontaneously expressed sound-symbolic words
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26715523 DOI: 10.1093/chemse/bjv078
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chem Senses ISSN: 0379-864X Impact factor: 3.160