Literature DB >> 7600084

The physiology of coloured hearing. A PET activation study of colour-word synaesthesia.

E Paulesu1, J Harrison, S Baron-Cohen, J D Watson, L Goldstein, J Heather, R S Frackowiak, C D Frith.   

Abstract

In a small proportion of the normal population, stimulation in one modality can lead to perceptual experience in another, a phenomenon known as synaesthesia. In the most common form of synaesthesia, hearing a word can result in the experience of colour. We have used the technique of PET, which detects brain activity as changes of regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF), to study the physiology of colour-word synaesthesia in a group of six synaesthete women. During rCBF measurements synaesthetes and six controls were blindfolded and were presented with spoken words or pure tones. Auditory word, but not tone, stimulation triggered synaesthesia in synaesthetes. In both groups word stimulation compared with tone stimulation activated the classical language areas of the perisylvian regions. In synaesthetes, a number of additional visual associative areas, including the posterior inferior temporal cortex and the parieto-occipital junctions, were activated. The former has been implicated in the integration of colour with shape and in verbal tasks which require attention to visual features of objects to which words refer. Synaesthetes also showed activations in the right prefrontal cortex, insula and superior temporal gyrus. By contrast, no significant activity was detected in relatively lower visual areas, including areas V1, V2 and V4. These results suggest that colour-word synaesthesia may result from the activity of brain areas concerned with language and visual feature integration. In the case of colour-word synaesthesia, conscious visual experience appears to occur without activation of the primary visual cortex.

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Year:  1995        PMID: 7600084     DOI: 10.1093/brain/118.3.661

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Brain        ISSN: 0006-8950            Impact factor:   13.501


  30 in total

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Review 6.  A critical review of the neuroimaging literature on synesthesia.

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8.  A common neural substrate for perceiving and knowing about color.

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Review 9.  Neurophysiology of synesthesia.

Authors:  Edward M Hubbard
Journal:  Curr Psychiatry Rep       Date:  2007-06       Impact factor: 5.285

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

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