Do you hear what I'm seeing?

Posted on Friday, August 15, 2008 3:17 PM PT

By Brian Alexander, contributing health writer

Imagine you’re watching some incomprehensible kid cartoon on TV with the sound off. But you realize that every time there’s a flash or some character runs across the screen, you hear a loud pop or a whoosh coming from the set. You double-check. Yes, it’s on mute.

You may have a brain condition called “auditory synesthesia,” a condition described for the first time in the journal Current Biology in August. People who experience it actually hear movement.

Synesthesia is a kind of cross-wiring of the senses. For example, when some synesthetes hear music, they also perceive colors. The most well-known form of synesthesia is called “grapheme” where someone might see, say, the number 5 on a page, but will also the color red in connection to the numeral.

The discovery of auditory synesthesia occurred serendipitously during a visiting student group tour at the California Institute of Technology. The students stopped by the lab of neuroscientist Melissa Saenz while she was running an experiment involving moving images — white dots emanating from a central point — on a computer display. 

One of the students asked, “Does anybody else hear that?” Saenz was intrigued. The computer program was running silently.

After speaking further with the student, Saenz realized the young man had all the characteristics of synethesia. “It is something he experiences all the time, not something he turns on or off, and he has experienced it since childhood,” she said.

Because the auditory condition had never been described in research, Saenz went about questioning a few hundred people. She found three, indicating that auditory synesthesia is not so rare. When the three looked at the white dots, they tended to hear whooshing, bubbling or scratching sounds.

Research indicates, Saenz said, that about 1 in 100 people may have some form of synesthesia, either seeing colors with certain numbers or letters of the alphabet or picking up a smell in response.

While it was once believed that many more women had it than men, new research suggests much of that discrepancy can be attributed to the fact that men tend to keep it to themselves. They would just rather not go around telling people that Hendrix’s “Purple Haze” makes them actually see purple haze.

In fact, Saenz’s own patient zero had long been aware that “he was probably hearing things that other people did not hear, that logically did not make sense,” Saenz says. “But it was not something he had mentioned to many people.”

Lucky for him, he ended up touring one of the leading experimental neuroscience labs.

Synesthetes are not crazy, or even damaged. It’s usually a benign condition. You could actually argue synesthetes have an advantage over the rest of us. Saenz believes it’s possible that synesthesia is just part of the range of normal human perception.

In fact, scientists use the competitive advantages of synesthesia to verify it exists. To confirm that her auditory synesthetes were not just imagining the sounds, Saenz developed a test designed to prove synethesia. The test is based on the idea that two senses combined ought to be better than one.

The three synesthetes and control subjects were exposed to moving visual patterns and auditory patterns that were either subtly different or exactly the same. Subjects were asked to tell whether each pair of visual or sound patterns were the same or different. On the sound pattern quiz, control subjects picked the right answer — same or different? — 85  percent of the time. But during the visual pattern test, they performed with only 55 percent accuracy, that is, no better than chance.

The synesthetes performed just as well on the sound pattern test. But on the visual test, they were able to distinguish visual patterns that were exactly the same or subtly different 75 percent of the time.

Why? Because they got an aid by also “hearing” the moving visual patterns.

Are these sounds real?

“It depends on how you define sound,” Saenz answers. “If define it as a perceptual event that occurs in the mind, indeed the sounds are there. If you call it a physical transmission of sound waves through air, there was no sound.”

Comments

I've never heard of this type of Synethesia...or at least, I've never met someone with this particular type.  I connect colors with numbers and letters (and 5 is blue, not red, at least for me :)) and I also see colors when I hear sounds.  

If anyone else out there like me is reading this article, there's a whole website for people like us.  Google "Synesthesia" and go to the Synesthesia battery.  It's run by Sean A. Day, a really famous Synesthete, and once you pass the test he's got going on the battery for whatever type of Synesthesia you have, you can join hundreds of other people talking about it!  There are about 450 of us on it right now and it's really amazing to connect with people like me, especially since I didn't find out about Synesthesia until I was 21 and already thought I was a freak.  The first time I realized no one else saw the colors, I was only 6, so I spent a good deal of my life feeling pretty alone.

I'm so glad articles about Synesthesia are getting out...if more people knew about it, it would be so much easier to identify kids at a younger age in classrooms.  When I asked my teacher for yellow chalk to draw my 2, she looked at me like I had three heads...maybe if she'd read this article first, she could have helped me out more.

:)
This is something really interesting to know....I never thought that its true...i always thought its my mind hallucinating...funny...but nice to know...
Very nice article about synesthetes, I never would've realized some of what one sees or hears might not actually be there, just perceived.  Thanks!
Very interesting. One would think that a person with synesthesia (auditory, visual or smelling) would have the advantage of accuracy.  On the other hand, it might also be causing a distraction. Do you think that children or people with ADD have this and it is simply not recognized because the ADD patient does not sit long enough to be tested? Perhaps it should be tested at the time of testing for ADD.  It seems that 1 out of 100 people is an extremely high number, I should think I would know someone with it, but I don't.  Since I do never heard of this before, I think it would be awesome to have these new perceptions liven up my life. Wow, just think fireworks in audio and technicolour, with a chaser of a scent to remember.
I'm a 43-year-old synesthete with a taste-sound modality; I can literally taste words and noises. My first real recollection of my synesthesia harks back to kindergarten, when I'd immediately taste moist, rich chocolate cake with chocolate icing every time my teacher said the word "practice". Other words or sounds produce equally delicious results; the peal of a bell tastes like cherry Jello; the word "much" tastes like a toasted cheese sandwich; and my own last name, "Wilson", tastes like homemade vanilla ice cream! Other words or phrases aren't so palatable. The word "dignity", for example, tastes like greasy sausage gravy (which I hate, while "simple" tastes like a sour pickle. For the record, I love being a synesthete, although I will have to admit that my appetite has been ruined or, on the other hand, I've begun to crave a particular food after hearing a specific word or sound, especially if it's repeated a number of times. I wouldn't have it any other way!  
I've always "associated" certain colors to most letters and numbers, i.e., five is always yellow, "A" is always red, but I don't believe I actually visually see the characters as those colors.

My mother handed me an article by a San Francisco columnist a few years ago in which she casually mentioned she did the same thing, and had people think it was odd.  I had evidently mentioned this association to my mom when I was a child and she remembered. (Yeah, Mom!)

Anybody else out there do the same thing?

A Mango-Shaped Space (2003) is a novel by Wendy Mass. It is about Mia, a thirteen year old girl living with synesthesia.
This is not really news is it? My sister and I have this, and think it may be hereditary. We have known we have it for about 6 years or more, so I was surprised to see it treated as NEWS....
My sister's is grapheme and mine is color with music.  Some songs/tones are pastels and some are primary colors...as always.  
Although this IS very fascinating, it is not new. See the 2003 book "The Man Who Tasted Shapes" by Richard E. Cytowic
I was always embarassed to tell people I saw red for the number 5.  It's weird they used that example.  I've never heard of synesthesia but now I wonder if that's what I have.  Does it work the other way too?  I've noticed that if I have my eyes shut and there is a noise (doesn't even have to be loud) but I see a flash of light that goes with it.
what's next, the computer's buzzing sound is my imagination too? tv's make noise, I can even be in the next room with the door open and tv muted and hear the staticy buzzes that the tv makes sometimes, but this article is trying to say it's all in my head, even if im not able to see the light flashes from the tv, but i hear them, it's just crossed wires. yeah right.
i dont think most people would believe this coud be that extreme, regardless if its good or bad. but along with many other things, i guess it can be. i have a minimal case, i hear things i see sometimes.  but colors with numbers and tastes with random words? crazy, but cool! there should be more research done, whatever the cause is im sure it is very interesting.
No, but I hear what I'm feeling.

I won't wear wool because the rasping sound is too annoying. If I have a snag on a fingernail and it catches on something, the sound is quite high-pitched,  sharp and jarring. Even pain has a sound - a dull ache has a sound that reminds me of a dentist's drill.

OTOH, a butter-soft silk knit sounds like a gently flowing stream and crip cotton sheets sound like leaves moving in the breeze.

Ironically, I suffer from mild hearing loss.
I don't get taste or color with all words, but emotions and physical sensations have definite tastes and colors. Only trouble is, the average doctor can't discriminate between a gray pain and a pink one, and so doesn't realize how much worse it is, even if you point out that it's also salty.
I was thirty years old before I learned that not everyone heard music in color! Never felt freakish about it, to me it seems completely natural.  Oddly, I don't have it with top-forty-type music, only instrumental pieces.  

cheers
I have grapheme synesthesia and for the most part, it helps me scan documents for editing. It's like spell-check.

I have the taste and auditory, but not as strong. I hear things...like, I can hold a leaf in my hand and hear the leaf as I look at it.

It worked to my disadvantage recently. I got sick, but I thought I was just tired. I went for a week with intense auditory hallucinations and just figured it was my usual synesthesia coming out extra strong for some reason. Then when I started having fainting spells, I realized it wasn't synestesia after all.

Now I'm well and back to the regular synesthesia.
Like Le Ann Wilson, I, too, taste words.  Test, for instance, tastes like canned tuna. Practice, however, to me tastes like a pastry shell. Christmas tastes like fried shrimp. Thoughts taste like chocolate ice cream. Wish tastes like celery.
I think it would be so amazing to have that condition, if you could even call it a condition.  I wish I could see colors while hearing music; I can only imagine how beautitul Mozart or Tchaikovsky classics must look.  And in response to Le Ann, I wonder how the music I listed would taste...  delicious, I'm sure!
I think this is a totally awesome type of "abnormality" to have. I can imagine that hearing your teacher say that you had to "practice practice practice!" brought a smile to your face every time lol. I would love to have something like that!! I know there have been times where I have had to check the tv for sound just because I could swear I hear something, but who knows I may just have found out I have something truly special :D
The human body is amazing. :)
I have sequence-space synethesia and truly only discovered that what I had lived with all of my life actually had a name.  It's hard to believe that everyone doesn't visualize numbers, days of the week and months in space as I do.  
Mhmmm...my aunt looked at me funny when I told her that her pasta tasted like black, when I was 7...Why do you think we don't talk about it as much, then?
I definitely connect colors with letters, not always with numbers although when i sit and concentrate on the number it defintely has a color connection...4 is always green for me, 5 changes...i guess with my mood i dont know....
Its cool to see that these things are actually something and not just me going crazy slowly but surely...well thats prolly the case too hahah!
I dont connect colors with sounds, i connect images....and if anything, moving images of color. But i do feel images, and more specifically moving images, is that something i wonder???
This probably isn't the same, but....

When I look out a window at rain, especially if I'm driving, I feel tiny drops of water hitting my hands, face, and legs. I used to look all around trying to find a leaky window or such.  Even a leaky window didn't explain how a droplet of rain would hit my leg through my pants and stockings. I'd wipe my face expecting to feel a drop of wet, but it was perfectly dry. I didn't notice this until I was in my 40s.
That's a great article, I've only heard of synesthesia vaguely and it was interesting how they talked about the tests and lab research :)) I don't comsider myself a "real" synesthetic but once in a blue moon I can smell words in print, I think it's really amazing but wish I could have more synesthetic experiences :) Wednesday smells like honey, the sun smells like roses, the name Andrew smells like rich chocolate! :)
Woah... i have graphene i think... and for me, 5 is yellow... i just thought i was weird...
I've never heard of this before, but reading this article, all things seem to click in my mind. I have always associated colors with numbers. I'm curious, however, if there is some set pattern to the mind. For example, if there is only a set range of color sequences for certain numbers. As mentioned in the article, I see 5 as red and as mentioned in a previous comment, I see 2 as yellow. Are there others with this exact pattern? 1- White, 2- Yellow, 3- Green, 4- Orange, 5- Blue It goes on, but 1-5 makes it easier. Thanks!
Yes. I believe Mozart had this condition, as he tended to associate key signatures with colors and corresponding moods. For example, the key of D major made him see the color yellow; it was a bright and sunny key. The key of B major (or B-flat major?) may have had more of a dark purple signature, and he associated the key with despair or mystery.

I myself, have noticed that i hear much more than most people when the television is on mute. I also, if i think about it hard enough, can associate colors with certain other stimuli like sounds and smells.
I have the motion-sound version.  This makes simple things, like going to church or a busy restaurant very exhausting.  Sometimes I just come home and crash.  I'll sometimes tell my husband to tell the kids to be quiet and he points out they aren't making a sound - just jumping and twirling.  I also still suffer from bad car sickness.  I wonder if it's related?
I, too, love being a synesthete, but really dislike having to constantly prove myself when people ask about it. Colors have shapes and letters and numbers have colors as well so I also hear the colors -- for me, music is just a lot of colorful geometry and sometimes it's quite painful (can't take much of The Mars Volta in one sitting!) I made quilts for my kids using the colors of their names. They see colorful quilts. When I look at them, I literally see their names over and over.

Coty in Toronto -- the advantage I have is that because I love words and know the color and shape patterns they 'should' have, I can edit with a simple glance. Or let my dh know the piano is out of tune because the colors edges got blurred when he played certain notes. Sounds like something out of scifi, but I would love a job based on these talents!

 

An awesome novel for young readers on the sujbect is "A Mango-Shaped Space" by Wendy Mass. The publisher is Little, Brown. Mass manages to make synethesia sound wonderful. I came away from the book thinking: those lucky, lucky synesthetes! And, not so coincidentally, what a wonderful writer!
I see colors with letters and numerals but i"ve always associated them with the faded wooden blocks I played with as a toddler. Could others be seeing something from an early association rather than a sensory cross-over?
As a child, I saw numbers defined by gender and personality.  5 was male. 4 was female.  7 and 8 were evil males intent on hurting 5 & 4.  When the teacher wrote a number on the blackboard such as 7548, I felt a sense of danger for 5 & 4.   I don't know if this is the same as synesthesia or not.  
i remember whem i was younger i always like to draw my name. Each letter was a specific color though like both i's were blue the n was red the m was pink and a was yellow. by the way i'm only 13 so when i read this article it suprised my how much could relate to these things.and thank you for metioning the battery website its helping me understand alot.
I stopped asking "Silly Questions" about the sounds no one else heard when I was still a child.
As I grew up I became afraid to ever mention it for fear of being labeled emotionaly disturbed.
At this moment I am simply overwhelmed to learn others who are normal experience this same thing and it has a name!!!!!!!
Every time my first-grade teacher said "lunch" I imagined myself biting into a sandwich - very specific, fried lunch meat (spiced luncheon loaf, specifically) on white bread with mustard, so detailed I could taste it.  I always assumed it was just the word evoking the idea, lunch=sandwich, but after reading this, I'm curious about it.  I'm not sure it's ever happened in any other context though. What a fascinating condition!
I feel a lot better reading this.  I connect sounds with colors, which other people have always found strange.  Good to know other people have the same issue.
My English class, of all classes was doing this whole thing about synesthesia and we even took a test to determine if we had it (numbers to colors). None of us were synesthetes, though :(
I have heard odd sounds for years that were heard by no one else but never paid attention to the accompanying circumstances to determine if they correspond to visual or any other cues. i simply atributed them to my former heavy drug/alcohol use. From now on I will take note of the surrounding activities and try to determine what, if any, correllations exist.
I have had this since a child . I told people the color of each number, I thought it had to do with the game pool or billiards. But the colors didn't match. I thought I was just weird.The number 3 was yellow the number 4 was green, but the to didn't mix to make the number 7, which is brown. I still count steps or stairs, so I thought it was a math thing. I'm good at math. I am also a sign artist and standup comedian. Is it math or art or....?This is really nice to hear, that other people do the same things I do. Maybe it goes back to paint by numbers. Either way it hasn't messed up my life.
I don't think I'm a synesthete, but I can relate...As a child I spent hours worrying that what I perceive as round might be some other shape to other people, or what was yellow to me might be some different color out of someone else'e eyes.  At about age 8 I realized that it didn't matter so long as we all agreed on the word for whatever it is being desribed...Language is everyting.
I don't know if i have synesthesia, but i do connect colors to numbers like 1 is light blue, 2 is just blue, 3 is red, 4 is yellow- orange etc.
But I thought everyone connected colors to numbers. Oh and for the record (Coty toronto) I do have A.D.D..
This was fascinating, and although i'm pretty sure I'm not a synthete, (I'm sure that spelling is horrid) I'd like to find others like me.

I can see perfectly well and am not blind, this is important to note, because I absolutely CANNOT visualize.

My memory of images is verbal.  I can describe very detailed, but Ican't "see" it.

If I read something I "feel" it. Somehow.  I connect through a "feeling/emotional" type of level.  Its sounds like some kind of Synthetetes, but???

What would this be called?  And are there others who can't visualize, and therefore can't remember what a person looked like that you haven't seen in some time?   I can't remember what my son looked like in his younger days, and it takes looking at my photos to remember.  (hes only 8)

There are no flashcards or snapshots in the head to locate the image files.

Yet if I had the images, I'd have a high percentage of recall.  Before the advent of PC's, in a book I could remember where an important part was and where on the page and generally what paragraph. I didn't memorize page numbers, but I could locate it by what part of the book I remember reading such facts.  It would just "feel right."  PC's "pages" are so long and columnular.

So am I completely weird in a good way, or are there others of you hiding out here.  It sounds like it might be another type of synethesia, but then again, maybe not.  

I learned of my oddity young as well,  my most vivid rememberance was music class in the 5th or 6th grade.  The teacher played a piece of classical music and asked us to to tell what we saw in our minds... then she called on students at random to answer.  I remember hoping she wouldn't call on me, for I saw NOTHING.  It was black.  They wanted images, I couldn't conjure any. I have no idea if I "felt" anything. She luckily never called on me and it was as I grew and encountered other "visual" instances where I couldn't "perform" that I learned of my oddness.

Thanks for listening.

A fellow odd person.

I remember being humiliated by my 5th-grade teacher when I tried to explain that the letter "K" was orange in an essay. She called me up to her desk and spoke with me, full of concern for my mental well-being.

Now, as a 41-year-old adult, I'm glad to know that there's more awareness of synesthesia. Hopefully fewer and fewer people will be ridiculed, and more of us can enjoy our perception of the world.
Synesthesia is quite the interesting subject.  I'm not a Synesthete but I did write a short research paper on the phenomenon for a psych class.  The only time I seem to experience anything of the sorts is when I see skater footage of people falling and catching their crotch on a hand rail, hehe.  I'm still quite interested in Synesthesia.  If you're interested in learning more, Richard E. Cytowic has written a book or two and seems to have done quite a bit of study and research on Synesthesia.
Rhonda, in California --

I'm the same way you are as I cannot visualize an image in my mind. I see things like everyone else when my eyes are open, but the best I can do in my head is a knowledge based idea. Like I know what I want (right now it's teal colored panels for my window) but I cannot physically see it in my mind. I'll recognize it easily when I see the actual piece I'm "visualizing" through words in my head.
The closest I can describe it is a feeling, but for the visuals out there recall a scene from the movie Daredevil - when he "sees" Electra in the rain. That split-second fuzzy image is all I get (and no, it's not continuous like the rain keeps falling, a split second is all).
Yet ironically enough, my dreams are technicolored like I'm living it. Go figure. I simply cannot visualize while I am conscious (sp?).

But I am a happy, healthy person.
Perhaps some people who are obsessive compulsive may actually have THIS instead!! Or perhaps the obsession/compulsion is a sensory issue. As Troy Hughes had said in his experience. There should be more research on the subject.

Sylvia Gardiner, I can relate. I always wondered the same thing, too. If my eyes picked up on different hues than others, in relation to other colors then each color I SEE would have a word and their hues would make it a different color to them, but with the same word. Amazing, yet complicated. :)
Some folks recollect having had synaesthesia from childhood. But it can also result from head injury even in adults, and even otherwise "regular" folks can experience the mixing of the senses that are the hallmarks of synaesthesia while on drug "trips".

Any of the 12 senses (which include proprioception, falling and rectilinear movement, etc.) can be involved in synaesthesia.  Since most folk are barely aware of their primary five senses, it's no wonder that many synaesthetes don't realize that other people don't experience the world the way they do until they read articles like this one (Kudos, Brian Alexander!).  

In my most memorable synaesthetic event in 1970, I experienced the positions of swallows in a flock flying over a river as notes on a musical scale and heard the music those "notes" produced.  It sounded like a beautiful piece of Impressionistic music.  I have relative pitch and at the time sang chorale music, but sight-reading was not my forte.

I researched synaesthesia in graduate school in the 1970s and believe that it is an ability with which we are all born that helps us learn, but for most of us it is superceded by the development of the language processing areas of the brain.

A very old and simplistic model of brain growth:  As our brain grows, it starts with what are basically "columns" of brain cells with little connection between those columns.  Over time we form connections (dendrites) between the columns, and stimuli coming into the brain from the senses are crucial to this process.  A generalization (OK, an over-generalization) is that the connections between the deepest cells on the columns have a tendency to be made before those closer to the outer surface of the brain.  Eventually this results in the deeply convoluted surface of the adult brain with which we are familiar. As the columns connect up, the brain also begins to develop preferences for how stimuli from the senses get funneled to different areas for processing (often referred to as "lateralization").  Primary and secondary association areas develop, and increasingly stimuli are funneled quickly to the areas of the brain that become responsible for language (Wernicke's and Broca's Areas). As language develops, the pathways of stimuli from the senses through the brain follow what begin to look like roadmaps, with "secondary streets" and "highways" spreading out to many areas.  Going to the language-processing areas of the brain, they seem more like "superhighways".  

In 1975 I formulated a theory that synaesthesia involves activation of the lower and earliest-forming connections between the columns of brain cells with which we are born and which usually are superceded by the developing "superhighways" to the language areas.  It looked at the time that the hippocampus may be involved as well as the reticular activating system, specifically the ARAS.

It explains why both synaesthetes and "regular" folk can make the same type of associations, but the synaesthetes actually experience them.  And in the case of synaesthetes, the particular  associations made are more persistent or accurate over time.  When chromasthetes (hear sound, see colors or vice versa) and "regular" folk were both asked to associate particular sounds with color chips on a standard color wheel used in phychological testing (many, many colors), both groups could do it easily, but when retested later, in some cases years later, the chromasthetes made the exact same associations they had before, while the "regular" folk didn't necessarily do so.

If my theory were correct, I hypothesized that in cultures in which people spoke languages that lacked words to distinguished between certain senses (for example, they had no words to distinguish between taste and smell), synaesthesia between those senses may be more prevalent than in cultures that had those language distinctions.

I never got the chance to test it.  At the time I was in graduate school, the topic of synaesthesia was considered too "flaky" for a serious researcher, and I was urged to go another direction.  

I am no longer affiliated with a research university.  However, I would love it if someone in a position to do so would explore my theory, regardless of testing out the specific hypothesis above.  If it pans out, please give a footnote to The Dreamkeeper's Daughter.  
Some folks recollect having had synaesthesia from childhood. But it can also result from head injury even in adults, and even otherwise "regular" folks can experience the mixing of the senses that are the hallmarks of synaesthesia while on drug "trips".

Any of the 12 senses (which include proprioception, falling and rectilinear movement, etc.) can be involved in synaesthesia.  Since most folk are barely aware of their primary five senses, it's no wonder that many synaesthetes don't realize that other people don't experience the world the way they do until they read articles like this one (Kudos, Brian Alexander!).  

In my most memorable synaesthetic event in 1970, I experienced the positions of swallows in a flock flying over a river as notes on a musical scale and heard the music those "notes" produced.  It sounded like a beautiful piece of Impressionistic music.  I have relative pitch and at the time sang chorale music, but sight-reading was not my forte.

I researched synaesthesia in graduate school in the 1970s and believe that it is an ability with which we are all born that helps us learn, but for most of us it is superceded by the development of the language processing areas of the brain.

A very old and simplistic model of brain growth:  As our brain grows, it starts with what are basically "columns" of brain cells with little connection between those columns.  Over time we form connections (dendrites) between the columns, and stimuli coming into the brain from the senses are crucial to this process.  A generalization (OK, an over-generalization) is that the connections between the deepest cells on the columns have a tendency to be made before those closer to the outer surface of the brain.  Eventually this results in the deeply convoluted surface of the adult brain with which we are familiar. As the columns connect up, the brain also begins to develop preferences for how stimuli from the senses get funneled to different areas for processing (often referred to as "lateralization").  Primary and secondary association areas develop, and increasingly stimuli are funneled quickly to the areas of the brain that become responsible for language (Wernicke's and Broca's Areas). As language develops, the pathways of stimuli from the senses through the brain follow what begin to look like roadmaps, with "secondary streets" and "highways" spreading out to many areas.  Going to the language-processing areas of the brain, they seem more like "superhighways".  

In 1975 I formulated a theory that synaesthesia involves activation of the lower and earliest-forming connections between the columns of brain cells with which we are born and which usually are superceded by the developing "superhighways" to the language areas.  It looked at the time that the hippocampus may be involved as well as the reticular activating system, specifically the ARAS.

It explains why both synaesthetes and "regular" folk can make the same type of associations, but the synaesthetes actually experience them.  And in the case of synaesthetes, the particular  associations made are more persistent or accurate over time.  When chromasthetes (hear sound, see colors or vice versa) and "regular" folk were both asked to associate particular sounds with color chips on a standard color wheel used in psychological testing (many, many colors), both groups could do it easily, but when retested later, in some cases years later, the chromasthetes made the exact same associations they had before, while the "regular" folk didn't necessarily do so.

If my theory were correct, I hypothesized that in cultures in which people spoke languages that lacked words to distinguished between certain senses (for example, they had no words to distinguish between taste and smell), synaesthesia between those senses may be more prevalent than in cultures that had those language distinctions.

I never got the chance to test it.  At the time I was in graduate school, the topic of synaesthesia was considered too "flaky" for a serious researcher, and I was urged to go another direction.  

I am no longer affiliated with a research university.  However, I would love it if someone in a position to do so would explore my theory, regardless of testing out the specific hypothesis above.  If it pans out, please give a footnote to The Dreamkeeper's Daughter.  
Thank you for the information on the Synesthesia website!  As a visual artist, my tastes and sounds and sights get all mixed up together - and it's wonderful, really!  The number 5 is red, atleast in my world, and it tastes slightly bitter.  When I look straight up into the deepest part of the clear blue sky, I could bite into it and it would have the texture and taste of Play-Do.  Music comes in colors and textures, too - soft as thick green flannel, or tinny tasting as my grandmother's old drinking cups.  Sunsets have sounds, colors have tastes, tastes have colors, etc.  I joke that my life is a perpetual acid trip.  Cheers to all synesthetes!


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About the blog

Insights and ruminations on the strangeness of all things medical, pharmaceutical and biological.

Msnbc.com writers and editors will muse upon the wonderfully weird human body and the medical curiosities that make you go huh, ewww or ouch! Looking for informed, unhinged meditations on everything from dubious diseases to recipes for ersatz mucous? Well, this is the place.

If you have a question, e-mail The Body Odd.

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