synaesthesia Flashcards
1
Q
perception is a brain process
A
- Eyes, ears, nose, mouth and skin have receptors that convert physical signals to neural signals.
- The brain perceives the world based on information from each sense, and form information from different senses and from stored knowledge of the world.
- Physical world not the same as the perceived world (e.g., visual and auditory illusions).
2
Q
multi-sensory perception
A
- Multi-sensory perception - the process by which information from different senses is brought together.
- Advantages:
1. More efficient and accurate than processing each sense separately.
2. Enables us to establish a single coherent perspective of the world.- Enables us to act on the world.
- Advantages:
3
Q
- Colour influences taste.
- Sound influences hardness.
Vision influences sound.
- Sound influences hardness.
A
4
Q
the McGurk illusion
A
- “BA” is presented to ears.
- “GA” is presented to eyes
- subject perceives “DA”.
- fMRI shows that silently looking at moving lips activates the auditory part of the brain (Calvert et al, 1997).
5
Q
what is synaesthesia?
A
- Concrete perceptual experiences (i.e., not imagination, memory association, or a ‘sixth sense’).
- Elicited by stimuli in the external environment or by internal thoughts (i.e., not hallucinations which occur spontaneously).
- Automatic and cannot be suppressed (i.e., unlike thinking and imagining).
6
Q
developmental synaesthesia
A
- Runs in families and has a genetic component (Baron-Cohen et al 1996).
- Equally common in males and females.
- Present throughout the lifespan.
- Often triggered by linguistic stimuli (letters, numbers, words, etc).
7
Q
acquired synaesthesia
A
- Sensory deprivation or pharmacologically triggered.
- Effect are temporary not permanent.
8
Q
brain differences
A
- In synaesthetes, there is exuberant connectivity across whole brain.
- Not just in regions related to synaesthesia.
9
Q
is this for real?
A
- High internal consistency.
- Functional imaging studies:
1. Nunn et al, 2002:
2. Synaesthesia activates - colour area (left v4)
3. Controls do not - even if trained to associate colour, even if imagining colour.
- Functional imaging studies:
- Synaesthetic stroop effect.
10
Q
links between vision and touch
A
- Blakemore et al, 2005, fMRI.
- Watching somebody else being touched activates our own somatosensory cortex (but watching an object touched does not).
11
Q
number-space synaesthesia
A
- Many synaesthetes see numbers in spatial arrays.
- Small numbers = LEFT
- Large numbers = RIGHT
- But we all are faster at responding to small number with left and large numbers with right hand (Dehaene et al, 1993).
- A universal mechanism?
12
Q
does everyone have synaesthesia
A
- Differences in genes, brain, cognition.
- Some have synaesthesia, most people do not.
- Some synaesthetes have it stronger than others.
13
Q
summary
A
- Science has established that synaesthesia is a real phenomenon in which a few people can have different perceptual experiences from the rest of the world.
- Synaesthesia may shed light on general mechanisms, present in us all, that integrates different senses and links perception to language, thought and memory.