Synesthesia, some people perceive individual symbols, characters, numbers

In summary: If you do, then you are in the top 25% based on my estimate and reading. I have a theory that EVERYONE has synesthesia, but most don't recognize it. For example, when you think about a door knob, do you feel anything in your hand?In summary, the conversation discusses synesthesia, a condition in which individuals perceive individual symbols, characters, numbers, and letters as having their own color. It can also involve a mixing of senses, such as seeing letters as colors. The conversation includes personal experiences with synesthesia, famous people who have claimed to experience it, and a recommendation for further reading on the subject. The possibility of synesthesia being more
  • #246


"
rhody said:
VOM,

Sound, smell convergence, I understand what you are saying 65% of cells respond to one of 5 odors, and about 1/3rd of those same cells respond to audio, and that 29% had enhanced/suppressed to a mix of smell and sound, which explains the "crossover effect". I fully get that. I have a few questions, first the short finding in the link provided was done by: National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders (NIDCD), and I believe on a population of test subjects which which may include non-synesthetes and synesthetes alike. How do we know if they were synesthetes or not unless they were tested independently for smell/sound synesthesia before taking the test with results presented here ?
"

Rhody, you can call me Mars. :smile: It's a nickname given to me by a very famous scientist. The handle I use "ViewsofMars" means Observations (Views=Observations so I used it since it was a shorter word) of Mars. And, I don't think you do understand. I NEVER said, "65%..."


"
rhody said:
I will answer your question by asking another, you said, " I would like to mention if someone is experiencing symptoms of synesthesia then he/she should consult a doctor." to which I respond, why don't you ask waht or chi meson who are following this thread if they feel they need to see a doctor about their form of synesthesia, and if it in any way inhibits their normal daily lives ?
"

I don't need to ask waht or chi meson. I'm following house rules here on Physics Forums - Forum: Medical Sciences due to the fact that synesthesia is considered to be a medical - communication disorder. You can review all that scientific research I have presented. If anyone has symptoms and are wondering what is happening then obviously they should consult his/her doctor for evaluation.

"
rhody said:
Lastly, you said, "It also brings to light a relatively unexplored area of the brain that could play a key role in conditions which are accompanied by disorders of sensory processing, such as schizophrenia and Alzheimer’s disease." I don't know how having sound/smell synesthesia correlates to having schizophrenia or alzheimer's disease. I would like to see hard evidence, in the absence of which I would tend to doubt it.
"

Again I must repeat to you, Rhody, I did not say, "It also brings..."

"
rhody said:
I am not a research scientist but do not believe that the most common forms of synesthesia are "disorders". See quote from zooby in https://www.physicsforums.com/showpost.php?p=2723961&postcount=153" above: [review post #244]


Rhody...
"

Yes, I realize you aren't a research scientist. Member zooby talks a lot. I support the The National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders -"The National Institutes of Health—The Nation's Medical Research Agency—includes 27 institutes and centers and is a component of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. It is the primary federal agency for conducting and supporting basic, clinical and translational medical research, and it investigates the causes, treatments and cures for both common and rare diseases."

I'll move onto another topic. I've provided enough information between this page and the previous one.

P.S. Welcome Rasalhague. Thanks for sharing.:smile:
 
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  • #247
rhody said:
Fuzzy,

and

This is very cool stuff, a further parsing, identification, localization, association and labeling of the synesthesia experience. So far, we recognize, upper, lower, projector, associator, implicit (not experienced but showing activation on scans), explicit (experienced and reported), bi-directional, bottom up (perceptual), involvement of early pre-attentive processes, involvement in later attentive processes, possible cross-activation, possible simultaneous activation, possible cross tuning model.

Crap, I gave myself a headache trying to condense it. I am sure I missed some descriptions ! lol. It must be the computer science nerd in me trying to reduce all of it into data structures. You can see what I am trying to do here, take a step back, condense, consolidate.



Rhody...

Thanks Rhody, you mentioned some things that really interest me.

There do seem many variations, and I really appreciate the condensation and will try to add to that myself, (of course, these are not necessarily all exclusive)- rare/not rare (e.g. number/spatial forms), congenital/acquired (e.g. cortical plasticity), sensory/conceptual or innate/ emotional (personification etc.), individual/universal (e.g. Dehaene’s SNARC, kiki-Bouba, Day’s take on Berlin and Kay’s colour theory- http://web.mit.edu/synesthesia/www/trends.html
http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/content~db=all?content=10.1080/02643290500200122), probably more, and also, terms- “To date, a plethora of terms have been used in the context of crossmodal research (‘heteromodal’, ‘multimodal’, ‘intersensory’, ‘polysensory’, ‘multisensory’, ‘amodal’, ‘supramodal’, ‘modality-specific’, ‘unimodal’, etc.).-2001
http://cercor.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/full/11/12/1110


By the way, I didn’t manage to sign myself into the site to read your link ( Multiple dimensions in bi-directional synesthesia )
about bi-directional dimensions, and found another from 2007-
http://www.apn.psy.unibe.ch/unibe/philhuman/psy/apn/content/e5616/e5621/e6314/e6342/files6343/Meier_Rothen_2007_ger.pdf [Broken]
It states that a unidirectional colour experience occurred at a subjective level, but a bimodal concurrence existed at a performance level. Only associator synaesthetes were tested. Is that similar?
 
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  • #248


rhody said:
I have been trying to find accurate graphics and or videos where the "normal" five senses (in a non-senesthetic individual) are thought to be processed for perspective. So far haven't come up with a good set of graphs and/or videos to address this. It would be nice to have for discussion and reference. I will keep looking.

Rhody...

I don't believe there is total agreement about these "normal" five senses, and more,
given this thread, you may need to be even more precise about what is the “ normal” senses you are looking for :).

To elaborate, my selection may be biased because this is what I’ve been looking at, but this more typical mingling of senses has been called ubiquitous, with an explosion of research away from the traditional view of isolated modes, or-

“Indeed, the multisensory nature of most, possibly all, of the neocortex forces us to abandon the notion that the senses ever operate independently during real-world
cognition.”

( http://webscript.princeton.edu/~asifg/publications/pdfs/Ghazanfar & Schroeder 2006.pdf
http://cercor.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/full/11/12/1110
http://ukpmc.ac.uk/classic/articlerender.cgi?accid=PMC2427054 [Broken] )
 
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  • #249


ViewsofMars said:
I'll make it fast since I have a project to finish up. I think my last two postings from the previous page provided valuable information, especially "A Whole-Genome Scan and Fine-Mapping Linkage Study of Auditory-Visual Synesthesia Reveals Evidence of Linkage to Chromosomes 2q24, 5q33, 6p12, and 12p12."

This has been linked to before in this thread, in post #169, and discussed a bit, for example, in post #173, if interested.
 
  • #250


Rasalhague said:
Hey, cool, a synaesthesia thread!...
Thanks for the fantastic post!



And thanks for the fantastic links!
 
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  • #251


Rasalhague, welcome to the elite club :biggrin:

Your post is a fascinating insight into a synesthesia perspective.

Rasalhague said:
I have fixed colour associations for letters, numbers, days, months, compass directions and the concepts of left and right. I associate triangles, squares etc. with the colour corresponding to the number of their sides. Like Waht, my A is yellow. My B is a very dark maroon. But we differ on C. Mine is light green.

Nice. I counted the occurrence of most common colors of letters that I perceive in the alphabet. And the distribution is: there is seven shades of yellow, five shades of white, and four shades of red, and three of brown all spread throughout the alphabet. The remaining few letters take on more cooler colors: green, blue, purple, and black.

If I think of a letter without looking at one, it tends to have its own synaesthetic colour by default, especially if I only think of a fairly abstract idea of the letter without imagining an example of it written down, in which case I can picture it how I choose, although I’ll probably still have a lingering impression of its synaesthetic colour.
For me, yellow is an aspect or attribute of A, part of its nature, and a blue A is an A in disguise! An A in drag?! When I think of the idea now, I have to make a conscious effort to banish the impression of yellow, otherwise saying “a blue A” creates a similar visual impression to “a blue yellow”--I see both colours.

Yes, same thing happens. I realized though that a thought of a letter triggers the color experience. If I close my eyes, and think about a letter, a color jolt occurs.

When I look a blue A, this is I think a what happens. The visual part of the brain immediately registers a blue color faster than the time it takes for another part of the brain to covert the visual symbol of the letter into an abstract thought which in turn triggers the synesthesia color experience. So in a sense a resonance effect occurs, which is flipping back and forth between the color perceptions that are separated by a small time delay.

As Zooby suggested to check out the effects of grapheme synesthesia on different colors of font, and background. I found that the time delay gets noticeably longer with more flamboyant font color, and darker background.
If I need two Greek letters to represent angles, I prefer not to use the traditional theta and phi, as these are both a smoky blue colour, albeit theta a little lighter than the pigeon-blue phi. Alpha and beta, which--like most of the Greek alphabet--have the same colours as their Roman counterparts make a much better contrast. (I should say my first language is English.)

Yup, most of the Greek alphabet is isomorphic synesthesially speaking to the Roman alphabet, with an exception of few letters. Gamma is still same as 'c' , delta is same is 'd' or phi is same as 'p' - which is why I think that the visual processing of the geometry of symbols like lines, curves gets translated into a thought first, and then a color experience occurs from the thought.

So I look at a triangle letter, and think to myself "aha, that's a delta." And immediately a 'd' follows from the first word "delta" and hence I get a color experience of 'd'.

Weird one is gamma. I should get a color experience for 'g' but instead I get a color for 'c' a third letter of the alphabet as is gamma.

3+4=7
RED+YELLOW=ORANGE

2+4=6
BLUE+YELLOW=GREY-GREEN

2+3=5
BLUE+RED=VERY DARK BLUE/BLACK/PURPLE

That's a correct addition of color. For me it's yellow + red = white.

When it comes to whole words, with me too, as with Waht, the colour of the initial letter usually predominates. My first, quickest, strongest, readiest association for colour words such as RED, GREEN, BLUE depends on the meaning. That’s the association I have when I just glance at the word or think of it as a whole without paying much attention. But as I look now at the letters I’ve just typed, paying more attention to them, I can’t help but “see” the colours of individual letters emerging.

Yes indeed. The first letter sets the color of the rest of a word. But there are few exceptions in days, months, shapes, or directions that don't follow this pattern. There is a unique color for most of those.

Monday is same color as 'm' but Wednesday is different color than a 'w'.
 
  • #252


ViewsofMars said:
I don't need to ask waht or chi meson. I'm following house rules here on Physics Forums - Forum: Medical Sciences due to the fact that synesthesia is considered to be a medical - communication disorder. You can review all that scientific research I have presented. If anyone has symptoms and are wondering what is happening then obviously they should consult his/her doctor for evaluation.
Quote for us exactly where it's defined as a "medical-communication disorder".
 
  • #253


Fuzzy thanks for the link, in response to your question, see below:
You really should try to sign up and download the other paper, PM me if you like and I will walk you through the process.
By the way, I didn’t manage to sign myself into the site to read your link ( Multiple dimensions in bi-directional synesthesia )
about bi-directional dimensions, and found another from 2007-
http://www.apn.psy.unibe.ch/unibe/ph...n_2007_ger.pdf [Broken]
It states that a unidirectional colour experience occurred at a subjective level, but a bimodal concurrence existed at a performance level. Only associator synaesthetes were tested. Is that similar?

The paper you provided is concerned with conditioned responses that "fire back" in bi-directional cross activation. This is for people who experience synesthesia in "the minds eye" referred to as associators. In a nutshell, what was found was a new way to test whether disasociations between conscious experience of synesthesia, and unconscious co-activation of synesthesia (by the unexpected "startle response" in synesthetes versus control individuals (who did not exhibit the startle response).

The method used to condition the "startle response" was as follows. They used skin conductive response to measure the startle reaction response. Blue was selected for synesthete's who would normally see blue when presented with a white box with the letter "A" in it. (see attached thumbnail). Test subjects were shown three colors at timed intervals (2 second exposure, then a rest period, 10 to 20 seconds to allow the skin conductive response to return to normal), when blue was shown, a boat horn with 100 db serving as the unconditioned stimulus. Red, blue and green squares were used to condition the startle response. The results implicate when the startle response was associated with the "real color", an association between the shock and grapheme (in the synesthetes's minds eye) was established. Results showed that during the conditioning phases the synesthetes would respond to the white box with the A in it as if they had been startled by the boat horn, whereas the controls did not respond. This processing is thought to occur in higher parietal cortex, particularly the http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Angular_gyrus" [Broken].

Compared to the other paper: "Multiple dimensions in bi-directional synesthesia", which used EEG measured event-related potentials, they were comparing associators (in the mind's eye) versus projectors (visualized in space), and synesthetes with a larger priming effect observed in the frontal and parietal electrode areas and another group in the frontal areas only. The results indicate that bi-directional activity for associator synesthetes, and that a disassociation between associator's and projectors was present. These results also show that for the first time, similar neural mechanism's underlie bi-directional synesthesia in synesthete's that do not report a synesthetic experience of a grapheme when a color is presented.

Note: Mingling terms: associator/projector in the first paper and explicit/implicit and higher/lower as one in the same thing (current thinking as of 2005) suggested by Dixon & Smilek in the second paper drove me a little nuts (no, try a lot nuts ! lol) trying to compare the two. To me, apples are apples and oranges are oranges and never the two shall meet, as a result I may have made interpretation errors in translation. :eek:

Rhody... :grumpy:

P.S.

I want to reread the dialog between Rasalhague and waht comparing their experiences. However, I am too tired at this point, at quick glance there may be some of their experience that is in agreement with the experiments discussed above, especially the associator parts. I will give that a harder look tomorrow, I want to do it with a fresh mind. I am toast right now. :zzz:
 

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  • #254


Fuzzy,

You asked:
I don't believe there is total agreement about these "normal" five senses, and more,
given this thread, you may need to be even more precise about what is the “ normal” senses you are looking for :).
By senses, I meant, sight, sound, smell, taste, touch and balance (edit: added 6/24, 12:34pm). What I was trying to convey, unsuccessfully was that it would be nice to have a mapping of the brain areas and descriptions of stimulus where each sense is perceived non-synesthetically under baseline test conditions.

Second, a collection of brain activation areas and descriptions where forms of synesthesia have been tested and reported. Sort of a living library if you like. Some of the paper's I have read provide a graph or two to indicate activation areas. Obviously, test conditions and technologies used to measure the synesthetic responses vary for each individual. A collection of links would suffice due to copyright issues to protect the researcher and his work.

Rhody... :cool:
 
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  • #255


waht said:
Rasalhague, welcome to the elite club :biggrin:

Heh, heh, thanks. Don't look now though, I think there's people studying us!

And thanks to everyone else for your kind comments on my ramblings...

waht said:
I counted the occurrence of most common colors of letters that I perceive in the alphabet. And the distribution is: there is seven shades of yellow, five shades of white, and four shades of red, and three of brown all spread throughout the alphabet. The remaining few letters take on more cooler colors: green, blue, purple, and black.

Interesting... I have 5 shades of red (three dark, one medium and rosy/reddish-orange/vermillion sort of a colour), 4 shades each of yellow and green, and 4 identical whites (in contrast to my numbers where the two white digits are different shades). Less common colours include some light-coloured ones: the translucent quartzlike pink i, amber/peach q, orange f, besides a brown, a middle-of-the-road blue (dark blue rather than light, but not murkily so), two shades of very dark grey, a black and one metallic.

waht said:
Yup, most of the Greek alphabet is isomorphic synesthesially speaking to the Roman alphabet, with an exception of few letters. Gamma is still same as 'c' , delta is same is 'd' or phi is same as 'p' - which is why I think that the visual processing of the geometry of symbols like lines, curves gets translated into a thought first, and then a color experience occurs from the thought.

So I look at a triangle letter, and think to myself "aha, that's a delta." And immediately a 'd' follows from the first word "delta" and hence I get a color experience of 'd'.

Weird one is gamma. I should get a color experience for 'g' but instead I get a color for 'c' a third letter of the alphabet as is gamma.

My gamma is dark brown like g, but a bit darker and greyer. Phi is more like p than f. For me, the exception is theta, which has this pale smoky grey-blue colour, unlike my dark green t. The Old English / Icelandic / runic letter "thorn" has the same colour as theta [ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thorn_(letter) ], as does Tuesday. But, just to be awkward, Thursday is a different kind of pale grey.

waht said:
That's a correct addition of color. For me it's yellow + red = white.

I wasn't expecting to find any, so I was quite excited to find those three. But I can't see how it could work in general.

waht said:
Yes indeed. The first letter sets the color of the rest of a word. But there are few exceptions in days, months, shapes, or directions that don't follow this pattern. There is a unique color for most of those.

Same here. East and south match their initial letters, but north and west do their own thing, espcially west which is nothing like any of its individual letters. The months are a similar mixture of ones with colours that match the initial letter, such as January and December, and others like June, September and November that diverge.

waht said:
Monday is same color as 'm' but Wednesday is different color than a 'w'.

My Wednesday is orange, more like its second letter than it's first, although more f-coloured really. Monday is black, possibly due to the /u/ sound.

Incidentally, when I started school, for the first year, we were taught an experimental phonetic spelling system called ITA, Initial Teaching Alphabet [ http://www.itafoundation.org/alphabet.htm [Broken] ], [ http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/1523708.stm ]. But I can't remember whether I had any colour associations at that time. When I look at the ITA alphabet now, I have all the associations I would have for the corresponding normal letters.

*

The abstract I mentioned was a bit ambiguous (and I don't have access to the full article), but I think they meant they found a correspondence between the frequency with which a colour occurs in a synaesthete's alphabet and the frequency of the corresponding colour term (the word)--rather than the frequency of the colour, since these colours aren't all pure colours and have other distinguishing features besides frequency.

Synaesthetes tend to associate higher frequency graphemes with higher frequency colour terms. For control participants, choices are influenced by order of elicitation, and by exemplar typicality from the semantic class of colours.

Anyway, here are some charts I made, inspired by that idea. In the one on the right, letters of the alphabet arranged by frequency, compared to the frequency of occurrence of the English colour terms from the set { orange, pink, yellow, silver, silver, grey, brown, green, red, white, black } which I judged the best match for the synaesthetic colours I associate with them. Letter frequencies from Wikipedia [ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Letter_frequency ]. Frequency of colour terms from BNC [ http://corpus.byu.edu/bnc/ ].

In the bar chart, colour words from left to right in order of increasing frequency versus how often a colour in that range occurs in my alphabet. As mentioned, except for white, multiple occurrences include several different shades. In some cases, the choice of which colour to include where is a bit arbitrary. Also what to call them (silver?, metallic?). To simplify that, I chose colour terms that I'd have known at the age I was first aware of these associations. More obscure and precise terms would make some of them arbitrarily very infrequent. Another problem is that some of these terms denote other things besides a colour. Not all that revealing, perhaps, but at least it gave me some practice learning how to do graphs in Mathematica.
 

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  • #256


Rasalhague, waht,

First, thanks to you and waht for contributing and comparing your perceptions and the frequency analysis you did, very cool.

From you last post:
Synaesthetes tend to associate higher frequency graphemes with higher frequency colour terms. For control participants, choices are influenced by order of elicitation, and by exemplar typicality from the semantic class of colours.

See Wapedia http://wapedia.mobi/en/Synesthesia" [Broken]
For example, sound-color synesthetes, as a group, tend to see lighter colors for higher sounds [20] and grapheme-color synesthetes, as a group, share significant preferences for the color of each letter (e.g., A tends to be red; O tends to be white or black; S tends to be yellow
Funny how your word frequency has the highest concentration in red, followed by yellow and green tied for second place. I never realized from what you experience that the first letter of the word predominates at a glance, but if you pay attention to it you said:
paying more attention to them, I can’t help but “see” the colours of individual letters emerging.

That makes me wonder if given more brain decoding and processing time your synesthetic brain completes the sequence. Would you mind trying a little experiment ? Using your your "blue" because of the high contrast between letters:

B, dark maroon
L, white
U, dark grey
E, reddish orange

Type these letters one space apart and glance, record what you see, look away, then look with full attention, record what you see, repeat this exercise increasing the space between each letter by one, note the results, until all letters take on their full color, trying to note the time interval (blending effects left to right), I know this is not easy. Repeat this exercise in the vertical like you see above, same deal, finally in diagonal left to right (top bottom) and again diagonal with the order of the diagonal reversed.

Where I am going with this is the visual and spatial reasoning processing areas in the brain, from: "The Brain that changes Itself", by Norman Doidge, page 34. maybe there is a "spatial component" to the sensation as well.
"in the left hemisphere, at the junction of three major perceptual areas where the temporal lobe (which normally processes sound and language), the occipital lobe (which normally processes visual images), and the parietal lobe (which normally processes spatial relationships and integrates information from different senses) meet"
If your test results indicate slight color and time to full color differences in how they are perceived even for the briefest of moments that you recognize them, it may indicate activity in the occipital and parietal lobes that differs in how non-synesthetes perceive and process letters (without color). Since you are good with numbers, you said you use mathematica to create your graphs, I know you will do well with this impromptu little test. Try as best you can to see if you can detect any timing of color change between letters spaced at increasing distance in all three axis, horizontal, vertical, and diagonal (both ways).
Some grapheme → color synesthetes report that the colors seem to be "projected" out into the world (called "projectors"), while most report that the colors are experienced in their "mind's eye" (called "associators"). [24] It is estimated that approximately one or two per hundred grapheme-color synesthetes are projectors; the rest are associators.

Finally, do you or waht or anyone else have the projector experience ?

You also said,
Sometimes when I’m on the verge of falling asleep, I’ll either experience a small muscle twitch or hear some small real noise, such as a creak or a click, which triggers a very short flash of visual experience, most often like a burst of TV snow.

I am not synesthetic in any way but did relate an incident when falling asleep reading a computer monitor with black and white text, that in the moment when the head bobs and you regain focus on the black words on a white background are suddenly neatly surrounded by dark red semi-circles in front of and behind each word. I dozed off a second time, my head dropped even lower, this time when I opened my eyes at a lower orientation the line of words had two of them outlined in brown and one in green. I was surprised but not shocked, having been reading about synesthesia for months. That was the first incident.

The next incident similar to yours was being awaken suddenly a few weeks ago by strong thunder and lightening. Maybe you are too young to remember but the old style analog TV sets when you turned them off the picture used to reduce to almost a tiny glowing ball for a few seconds before flickering out. As I dozed off after a thunder clap, a small wispy ball (similar to the TV ball)appeared in the center of my minds eye, it started off as deep blue grew in a swirling mist, taking on a greenish tinge as it grew, to about 1/10 of my minds eye's viewing area before evaporating. It lasted five to ten seconds. I woke up with the properties of it in clear detail. A few weeks later another thunderstorm that woke me did not produce the same effect however.

Rhody... :wink:

P.S. waht or anyone else with color-grapheme synesthesia you are more than welcome to try this little test, just use a word which has high contrast colors between the letters, they are different for most everyone.

I attached a graphic thumbnail for Regions thought to be cross-activated in grapheme-color synesthesia (green=grapheme recognition area, red=V4 color area).
 

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  • #257


Thanks Rhody, especially for your offer and detailed answer. I think you’ve answered it well for me. My wonder was how “projectors” fared, and as well I'm interested in "performance", but not "subjective experience", levels. To your note, I wonder whether the higher/lower terms may be being abandoned as of that latest paper ( http://psy2.ucsd.edu/~dbrang/images/brang_neuroimage_2010.pdf ).

Sorry I hadn’t been more helpful before regarding your query. These probably aren't too helpful by way of functional images of sensory systems. The first explains a bit about mapping, but is mainly limited to the primary visual cortex (V1)- and concerns about plasticity.


http://www.med.harvard.edu/AANLIB/home.html
http://www.med.harvard.edu/AANLIB/cases/caseNA/pb9.htm
 
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  • #258


rhody said:
Type these letters one space apart and glance, record what you see, look away, then look with full attention, record what you see, repeat this exercise increasing the space between each letter by one, note the results, until all letters take on their full color, trying to note the time interval (blending effects left to right), I know this is not easy. Repeat this exercise in the vertical like you see above, same deal, finally in diagonal left to right (top bottom) and again diagonal with the order of the diagonal reversed. [...] Try as best you can to see if you can detect any timing of color change between letters spaced at increasing distance in all three axis, horizontal, vertical, and diagonal (both ways).

This is tricky. I began by looking at a sequence of horizontal BLUEs with increasingly many spaces, but--perhaps having synaesthesia on my mind--I saw the individual letter colours from the beginning, even on the one where they weren’t separated by any spaces. (I’d arranged them in a word file spaced one to a page so that I could scroll from one to the next with a mouse click.) I did some typing on an unretated subject, then tried again. This time it began with a fairly prevailing sense of blue, although I was aware of the individual colours too to some extent. The initial B actually started off with the blue colour I associate with P. But I was also to some extent aware of the white of the L and the grey of the U which gave it the ambience of a blue sky dotted with white and grey clouds, or of white and grey stone buildings under a blue sky. I didn’t have any clear picture of a fully realized scene of that sort; it was just a vague impression of the atmosphere evoked by the colours. The one thing that changed with the spacing happened quite suddenly. When I got to either 7 or 8 spaces (at that speed, about 3 clicks a second, and trying to concentrate on the colours, I lost count a bit), the B switched from blue to black, closer to it’s own very dark russet brown colour. Calling it maroon or brown might give the wrong impression: its own colour is very dark, with purplish qualities even. Imagine an old crayon in a school crayon pot that's got caked in the colour of so many crayons it's almost black! Subsequent tries: nothing so sudden. Sometimes the B takes on the blue colour from the word's meaning, sometimes it's darker, more like its own colour, or somewhere in between: a very dark blue contrasting with the white of the L.

The variations are so subtle, complicated and mostly so continuous that it's hard to know what to time. When I look at the words YELLOW, GREEN, ORANGE, PURPLE, BLUE, WHITE, BLACK here in text next to each other, the word colours prevail at a glance, but the emergence of the letter colours can happen too fast to time with a simple slight shift of focus in my attention, intended or otherwise. Calls to mind William James's "turning up the gas to see how the darkness looks". And it's not strictly one or the other: I can be more aware of the word colour or more aware of the letter colours but without excluding awareness of the other. And, as with the B of BLUE, the word colour can sometimes have a bigger effect on one letter than on others.

I'll play with this some more and with more arrangements as you suggested. I've tried it with a short sequence of random colour words, each a different random spacing, most horizontal but a few vertical, and running through them quickly to see what the experience is like and what it might be possible to quantify. First impressions: at the moment the colours of the letters are mostly trumping the semantic colours of the words, even without much spacing. As with BLUE, it's the initial letter, the dark grey-brown G of GREEN that's most inclined to take on a hint of green, although it keeps a lot of its own quality. As I click through them, it's like a greeny brown, olive, woodland hue on the left, next to the yellow R, then there's the bright orange-red EE and the dark red N. It makes a nice combination. As BLACK flashes past, its most salient features are the initial B which again accommodates itself to the word colour and becomes completely black, contrasting strongly with the yellow A in the middle. Seen quickly, the other letter colours in this one don't get much of a look in. A waspish combination. The letters of RED stay quite distinct in the various arrangements I've set up, with just a little bit of bleed through of the red E to the R. I only included one ORANGE, without spaces, and it flashed by an orange colour, so that should make a good one to study as it's initial letter is white, and so makes a bigger contrast with the word colour than some of the others. Looking at it now, and shifting focus back and forth, I could even express it the other way around: the orange "emerging" through the white and suffusing the yellow of the A in the middle and the slightly darker yellow R, leaking out from under the very dark red N, but leaving it and the dark grey-brown G least affected. (The E, already reddish orange, of its own accord.)

Just tried the BLUEs again, after a break, and again the B started out more blue and switched to black, this time on 6 spaces. (Times New Roman 12 point, zoom 200%, screen a handlength out of reach).

Well, I'll have a go at setting up some more orderly tests with other words too.

rhody said:
Finally, do you or waht or anyone else have the projector experience ?

I think I'm probably just common-or-garden "associator", if I understand the distinction right. I'll have to read up more on the definitions, but when I’m prompted to think of a single letter, the colour is in my mind’s eye, not projected onto whatever I happen to be looking at in the outside world, and it’s not particularly localised in my mind’s eye unless I start imagining the letter in relation to other letters or objects. When I look at the letters I’m typing now, I’m not in any doubt that they’re all black; I don’t see their associated colours blotting out their real colours. That said, when I become aware of them, the associated colours are localised by the positions of the letters on the screen. I can cast my eye over a bunch of paragraphs, without paying attention to the meaning of the words, and take in lots of colours without a noticeable delay, at the same time as each other, each localised at the corresponding letter, the colour perceived subtly somehow in parallel to the letter rather than superimposed on it. The real colours out there dominate, but the associated colours do have a spatial connection to the locations of the letters, so I'm not sure whether that would be called projection. It's not intrusive though, if that makes any sense...

So the coloured letters in the Wikipedia article are not really like how I perceive a bunch of monochrome letters and numbers in the outside world. They’re perhaps closer to how I think of letters most naturally if I have to imagine them without a real-world visual prompt, although in that case, the colour can be the predominant visual part of the experience and manifest even if I don’t go as far as picturing a particular way of writing the grapheme, or only vaguely visualise the shape. As for their choice of colours, the ones that clash with mine stand owt liKe an obViouslly missPelt wword. I can well imagine it distracting me and tripping me up if I had to remember a bunch of arbitrarily coloured letters and numbers like this or answer questions on them in a hurry.

Regarding the comment in the aricle about vowels and consonants, they’re equally vivid for me.
 
  • #259


Rasalhague,

Thanks for your attempt at this. I know it is not easy. In the meantime I am looking into the nuts and bolts of: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eye_tracking" [Broken], what the current technology is like and what background information there is that may help refine this little test (without technology, hehe), I always try to improvise and adapt to whatever situation I find myself in anyway, so it is a natural thing for me to do.

I will give your first results a harder look later and get back to you, thanks for your participation in this little exercise, you are a good sport.

Rhody... :cool:
 
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  • #260


rhody said:
In the meantime I am looking into the nuts and bolts of: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eye_tracking" [Broken], what the current technology is like and what background information there is that may help refine this little test (without technology, hehe), I always try to improvise and adapt to whatever situation I find myself in anyway, so it is a natural thing for me to do.

It crossed my mind too, for example whether someone could identify the "wrongly coloured" letters from a set that included some right and some wrong, for a given grapheme synaesthete, judging by how long they spent looking at them--thinking of how the wrongly coloured letters in that image near the top of the Wikipedia article attracted my attention like spelling mistakes while I tended to skim over the correctly coloured ones, taking them more for granted.
 
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  • #261


RasalHague,

Nice post and interesting results, you said,
The variations are so subtle, complicated and mostly so continuous that it's hard to know what to time.
I agree, as an adaptation we could try using powerpoint, create slides with words, with timed unmasking of words and sequences of letters using different widths and time between letters, (this would ensure consistency and repeatability to the test). This is the long hard way to do things but is the most flexible.

Or use an online color-grapheme test if one is available (which may not be as flexible as we would like, a tradeoff). There are (at least) two more variables to consider, one, eye tracking, after reading the article in full I realize that there are many things to consider, the most important was the way the eyes process move to distinguish and then process data, through fixation and http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saccade" [Broken] except below:
Function:
Humans and other animals do not look at a scene in fixed steadiness; instead, the eyes move around, locating interesting parts of the scene and building up a mental 'map' corresponding to the scene. One reason for the saccadic movement of the human eye is that the central part of the retina—known as the fovea—plays a critical role in resolving objects. By moving the eye so that small parts of a scene can be sensed with greater resolution, body resources can be used more efficiently.

In addition, the human eye is in a constant state of vibration, oscillating back and forth at a rate of about 30–70 Hz. These microsaccades are tiny movements, roughly 20 arcseconds (one five thousandth of a degree) in excursion and are completely imperceptible under normal circumstances. They serve to refresh the image being cast onto the rod cells and cone cells at the back of the eye. Without microsaccades, staring fixedly at something would cause the vision to cease after a few seconds, since rods and cones respond only to changes in luminance.

Timing and kinematics:
Saccades are the fastest movements produced by the human body. The peak angular speed of the eye during a saccade reaches up to 1000°/sec in monkeys (somewhat less in humans). Saccades to an unexpected stimulus normally take about 200 milliseconds (ms) to initiate, and then last from about 20–200 ms, depending on their amplitude (20–30 ms is typical in language reading). Under certain laboratory circumstances, the latency of, or reaction time to, saccade production can be cut nearly in half (express saccades). These saccades are generated by a neuronal mechanism that bypasses time-consuming circuits and activate the eye muscles more directly.[3][4]

The amplitude of a saccade is the angular distance the eye travels during the movement. For amplitudes up to about 60°, the velocity of a saccade linearly depends on the amplitude (the so called "saccadic main sequence"). For instance, a 10° amplitude is associated with a velocity of 300°/sec, and 30° is associated with 500°/sec. In saccades larger than 60°, the peak velocity starts to plateau (nonlinearly) toward the maximum velocity attainable by the eye.

Saccades may rotate the eyes in any direction to relocate gaze direction (the direction of sight that corresponds to the fovea), but normally saccades do not rotate the eyes torsionally. (Torsion is clockwise or counterclockwise rotation around the line of sight when the eye is at its central primary position; defined this way, Listing's law says that when the head is motionless, torsion is kept at zero.)

Head-fixed saccades can have amplitudes of up to 90° (from one edge of the oculomotor range to the other), but in normal conditions saccades are far smaller, and any shift of gaze larger than about 20° is accompanied by a head movement. During such gaze saccades, first the eye produces a saccade to get gaze on target, whereas the head follows more slowly and the vestibulo-ocular reflex causes the eyes to roll back in the head to keep gaze on the target. During these head movements Listing's law is no longer obeyed.

Saccades, as well as microsaccades, can be distinguished from other eye movements (ocular tremor, ocular drift, smooth pursuit) using their ballistic nature: their top velocity is proportional to their length. This property can be used in algorithms for saccade detection in eye tracking data.

In addition if you look at this figure: see attached thumbnail: you will see the fixation times vary, for instance in the fourth line down, after "syd-" the eye slowed to analyze the hypen and space after it. Interesting...

The second issue is environment you test in, preferably a comfortable place with few distractions.

You also said,
The letters of RED stay quite distinct in the various arrangements I've set up, with just a little bit of bleed through of the red E to the R
that is interesting because for you red is your most predominant color, maybe it is "most quickly primed in your visual cortex", you said it was "quite distinct".

A lot to consider and I think you will agree not an easy thing to do after taking a peek a "bit deeper under the covers", I for one appreciate a more detailed understanding of how we visually acquire and process information, which can't be a bad thing, right ? hehe.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

All of what follows is my on-line search for a test close to the one we have in mind. A scary thought just came over me, what if no one has ever done this test before, hmmm.

I found this http://www.synesthete.org/files/EaglemanetalSynesthesiaBattery2006.pdf" [Broken] by Dr Cytowic including results from: "A new measure: the speeded congruency test" but this was only for recognizing individual letters. You may find this interesting because it shows with 1 to 2 ms accuracy how synesthetes differentiate individual letters on various levels of shaded backgrounds.

You may find this interesting as well: http://steverudolfi.com/synesthesia/viewAll.php" [Broken] where all people reading this thread can take the test and then record for posterity their personal maps !
There are about two dozen or so there right now. I found it interesting, (assuming of course that most of the testers did not lie cheat) that there were some "fragmentary associations". This is consistent with waht experience for sound -> color, only certain frequency ranges played a specific way for a specific duration cause the sensation.

I also found this: http://synesthete.org/" [Broken] From a quick scan of it, it doesn't seem to have the test we are trying to accomplish.

I can't say for certain, but after a substantial time of not finding a similar test, then it's back to doing it the hard way. What do you think, RasalHague, should I play with Powerpoint to see if I can come up with automated timed slides ? Do you have any creative ideas ? I am open to them, or from anyone else following this thread ?

Rhody...

P.S. I will be away for the next two days without computer access so, please don't get the wrong impression, I will check back in on Sunday evening. Thanks...
 

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  • #262


No one may have noticed but back in https://www.physicsforums.com/showpost.php?p=2773738&postcount=254" I edited in the following possible type of synesthesia: balance
By senses, I meant, sight, sound, smell, taste, touch and balance (edit: added 6/24, 12:34pm)

I have put the PowerPoint slide test on hold for a bit, once again my curiosity got the best of me, so its off to search for examples of where balance (also known as kinetics) and one or more additional senses may be linked. The reason I added it was of a heart wrenching story about a young women who http://www.medmovie.com/1190/1190_031_Vestibulocerebellum.swf" [Broken] was 98% destroyed because of a rare side effect from taking, gentamicin. The balance system in the body is closely linked as one would imagine with visual processing. That story is fascinating in and of itself, and I will tell the complete story of this young woman in another thread. I have to finish the book first. Back to the subject at hand, then.

As usual after a moderate search I found this http://www.wrongdiagnosis.com/n/nervous_system_conditions/subtypes.htm" [Broken] as United States Flag 1,056 Traffic Rank in US, so it is very very good. I found it a bit difficult to navigate, but on the flip side I did find new types of synesthesia previously uncatagorized, including my sought after prize, balance (referred to as kinetics) see attached thumbnail for the types.

I only provided a link to nervous system conditions section. There is a vast, huge amount of categorized information here, :cool: From what I have seen so far it is free and appears fairly current and reliable, and accurate as well. The only downside is that the details of lots of conditions point you to books for bucks. That is a bummer, the upside is that there is hundreds of nervous system conditions displayed which is very very good. A quick medical reference definitely comes to mind if you need one.

Let's see, opening the thumbnail. almost at the bottom of the list, "orgasm to color" synesthesia, lets... not touch that one, I don't want this thread locked after all this work, lol. Now, moving on at the bottom, there is time to space synesthesia. Hmmm that looks worth looking into. I will leave it to the readers of this thread to contribute to as yet discussed types. Please do so if you find one that matches your experience. We would really like to hear what you have to say.

Note, By now, some of you are probably starting to think, "is Rhody obsessed with this ?", for the record, the official answer is: No. Having said that, there is so much to left to explore here that I find myself probing wider, deeper than I normally would, without the wonders of google, this would not be possible, taking my time as I do so. I still find the time to enjoy family, sports, hobbies (other than PF), work, well let's forget that part, heh, heh. Before 2000 and internet/google research went like this: hear about a subject, go to library, bookstore, find read a book, use reference to find the next, wash, repeat, now all of these activities are reduced to minutes, and in some cases seconds to build a huge tree of information to be filtered, investigated and to some degree vetted as well.

Rhody...
 

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  • #263


I don't want the thread locked either. A little related to both sense and different types of synaesthesia are a couple of mentions on the web of "velociperception", but they aren't peer-reviewed as far as I know, and I don't know if it is acceptable to discuss things like that here. Also there was mention of musical chills here, and I think there are a few more types or sensations I've read about.
 
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  • #264


Fuzzy,

Whew, no thread lock, now I feel better. :wink:

RasalHague,

I have Powerpoint on my PC and will start investigating some templates and timer classes to see if we can't pull off this little test. I will try to make it simple, but produce some stats that you can e-mail me. I need to investigate it further, but I will probably need to e-mail you a .ppt file via e-mail to make this fly.

In the mean time in the course of reading another book, I found this: regarding savant experiences with synesthesia: from: Brain that changes itself, Norman Doidge, page 270:
Russian neuropsychologist Aleksandr Luria worked with a mnemonist, or memory artist, 'S", who could memorize long tables of random numbers, and made a living performing these skills. S had a photographic memory, going all the way back to infancy, and was also a "synesthete", so that certain senses, not normally connected, were "cross wired". High Level synesthetes can experience concepts, such as days of the week, as having colors, which allows them to have particularly vivid experiences and memories. S associated certain numbers and like Michele, could not often get to the main point

Ok, you are probably thinking to yourself, who is Michele. Here is the mind blowing part: Michele is a seemingly healthy middle aged woman who is very special. She was born without the left hemisphere of her brain. She doesn't see color for a day of the week, she sees whole scenes when she reads words. In the example in the book, she says:
For Monday I picture my classroom at the Child Development Center. For the word, 'hello' I picture the little room off to the side of the lobby of Belle Willard.
and
"Holy Cow!" Carol (her mother) erupted. She explained that Michele went to Belle Willard, a special education center, from the time she was fourteen months until she was two years and ten months.

The "Holy Cow" line gave me a chuckle, because I have used a similar line, "Holy Crap" more than once in this thread. I am glad to know it is not just me. hehe.

Michele's survival and development is a fascinating story which I plan to cover in full in another post in another thread on another subject in the future. Just thought you might like that little story.

Rhody... :wink:

P.S. I believe the use of High Level synesthesia is reserved for more abstract concepts for things like days of the week, and in my mind at least cannot see how they could be Projector like event, it must be in the person's minds eye, referred to as an https://www.physicsforums.com/showpost.php?p=2773373&postcount=253" event. So we still need to keep higher and lower as well when referring to the abstract such as days on the week, in addition to projector and associator. grrrr... Just when I thought things could be simplified a bit I guess they can't.
 
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  • #265


Holy ... !

I was looking at a web page in deep blue, almost purple background http://projectavalon.net/forum/showthread.php?t=1785", with white lettering:

Guess what I saw: partial grapheme -> color synesthesia for letters:

lower case: n,d,h,p,u,f,t,g,n light green
lower case: l,i,o,e,1,8 light pink

Holy crap ! If I rapidly open, close and strobe my eyes, more than 3 times a second, the effect goes away and the letters are pure white !

Woo hoo... now I know what partial grapheme -> color associative synesthesia feels and looks like.
I swear to God, I am shaking as I type this. I can't freaking believe it. By sheer chance, in a search for a missing scientist of all things, thanks, Dr Li, I hope you are alright and they find you intact somewhere.

Rhody... :biggrin:

P.S. RasalHague, do some 3 to 5 second stobing with your eyes, both, left only, right only, and let me know what you see, just for comparison.
Now that I know my form of synesthesia only manifests with dark/blue/purple background, try my page as well with white lettering and let me know what you see.
 
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  • #266


Wow Rhody! I don't know what say. This is really exciting. Have fun exploring it.

It also further confirms a widespread occurrence of fragmentary synesthesia.

I've looked at your background, and just as I suspected it's sort of uncomfortable for me to look at. My regular synesthesia is still there, but it takes longer to get a color kick than if the background was lightly colored with dark font.
 
  • #267


waht said:
Wow Rhody! I don't know what say. This is really exciting. Have fun exploring it.

It also further confirms a widespread occurrence of fragmentary synesthesia.

I've looked at your background, and just as I suspected it's sort of uncomfortable for me to look at. My regular synesthesia is still there, but it takes longer to get a color kick than if the background was lightly colored with dark font.

waht,

Thanks, try this little exercise with what stimulates color with you. Starting at a slow pace, open and close your eyes staring at letters that normally produce color backgrounds, increase the rate of blinking until the letters appear black with no background as they should. Let me know what rates seem to work for you.

Rhody... :wink:
 
  • #268


Wow, Rhody!
 
  • #269


After my discovery of partial grapheme -> color synesthesia the other day, I reconsidered the Test I was proposing in Powerpoint with RasalHague. I think using Visual Basic would be more flexible and allow for different backgrounds, font choices/sizes/colors, for comparison to see if the exact timing and bleeding into the characters can be pinned down per individual case, or make them disappear altogether with subtle changes to font choice/size/color.

I find it interesting that I can negate the effects of if entirely when I close and open my eyes rapidly, forcing my visual cortex to recreate from scatch if you will the entire viewable area minus the colors over the white letters.

I need a bit of professional advice here, from my "seat of the pants experiment", I reckon, (hey, I like that non professional word, lol) that the synesthesia effect disappears somewhere around 8 to 10 eye blinks a second, between 100 - 125 ms.

Can someone who is a professional (SW, perhaps) point me to a good time reference of how long each phase takes to process an image in the visual cortex, and what each stage is referred to and link(s) to subsequent stages ? What about the startle response ? Is it being reset somehow every time I blink quickly ? Or over some time period ? One would think that the brain would figure out after many blink cycles, hey, those fragmented selection of letters are supposed to be light green and pink, now I am going to make them that way !

Now that's interesting, the more the vision is corrected for one eye than the other results in the synesthesia happening quicker, when my left eye only (the weaker one the letters not as clearly defined is blinked at the 8 to 10 times per second, the pink/green letters don't seem to appear at all, the right eye (not astigmatic but a bit far sighted) the letters are much more pronounced (in my mind's eye at least being pure white) and the letters are sharper and crisper, in this case after a number of blink cycles (past 10 - 15 seconds) the faint pink (first seen) followed by green letters appear. To me this means that precise image of the grapheme within the brain is critical to create the colored synesthesia. Second, once the "startle response" detects no change then the grapheme -> color synesthesia appears again as if by magic.

RasalHague, tell me you have 20/20 vision, please, only kidding. I want to try to account for as many possible variables as possible. You are seeing coarse grained tests turn up more and more variables to account for when synesthesia is being turned on. In my case it is the sharpness of the white letters. That's science for you.

Rhody... Just playing with you... hehe
 
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  • #270


Well...I came here because I thought I experience synesthesia sometimes...but now that I perused the wiki article...I don't know!

I normally have color experiences when I lose large amounts of sleep. What happens is I see color between the edge of objects...like if I look at popcorn ceiling there is color between the popcorn in certain places, or color between the wall and the door, or color everywhere in general lolol. What's weird is I have an understanding of the color as if it has its own story and I experience positive emotions in relation to the stories of the color. It is not like enjoying a color, but like experiencing it and understanding it. I don't know why this would happen with large amounts of sleep lost. In psych class we just learned about color perception and the thalamus, and I can understand one of the color theories as it relates to the thalamus because in regular waking state I can sometimes see alternations between violet and yellow and magenta and green...well maybe the violet is more like an indigo. AND I have never used any drugs like LSD or any illegal things...just coffee and tylenol :D
 
  • #271


OK...maybe I'm just moderately crazy then. I'm okay with that!
 
  • #272


I wonder if that may be related to after-images possibly with eye strain. I don't think after-images have been explained well, so that may or may not be related.
 
  • #273


Thanks Fuzzyfelt...I understand the eye strain thing, you could be right! My eyes are possibly strained from being so tired and I get so consumed with the beauty of the colors that I feel positive emotions and ...well them having their own stories maybe that is something from being exhausted too! The colors are very vivid and beautiful though, not like the normal eye strain thing. It could also be something with my thalamus, and over-exhaustion makes some other neural pathways that normally would not be associated with color overlap. I don't know! It is like the part in the article that talked about color having a personality, but I would not say it is the same because it is more like the colors communicate a story by their hue and I understand it.

anyways >_> I shall take my weird self somewhere else now!
 
  • #274


rhody said:
Holy ... !

I was looking at a web page in deep blue, almost purple background http://projectavalon.net/forum/showthread.php?t=1785", with white lettering:

Guess what I saw: partial grapheme -> color synesthesia for letters:

lower case: n,d,h,p,u,f,t,g,n light green
lower case: l,i,o,e,1,8 light pink

Holy crap ! If I rapidly open, close and strobe my eyes, more than 3 times a second, the effect goes away and the letters are pure white !

Woo hoo... now I know what partial grapheme -> color associative synesthesia feels and looks like.
I swear to God, I am shaking as I type this. I can't freaking believe it. By sheer chance, in a search for a missing scientist of all things, thanks, Dr Li, I hope you are alright and they find you intact somewhere.

Rhody... :biggrin:

P.S. RasalHague, do some 3 to 5 second stobing with your eyes, both, left only, right only, and let me know what you see, just for comparison.
Now that I know my form of synesthesia only manifests with dark/blue/purple background, try my page as well with white lettering and let me know what you see.

Last night I was reading a web page, http://lifeboat.com/ex/bios.edward.taub" with a black background, white lettering at home. Low and behold some of the letters only appear in light green, no pink, versus light green and light pink with a dark purple background and white letters. Worse yet, I try to make it happen on another PC, same black page, same white lettering and no light green letters at all, must be the way the RGB settings are on that machine and the refresh rate. My machine at home has a fast high res video card, and a high def monitor, whereas this machine has a basic video card and not the greatest resolution or refresh rates. I will double check at home and report what letters that were reported under the dark purple background are either in agreement with or missing from the black background.

It's nice to come back to this thread, lots of good memories here, experiments yet to be completed, on hold, at least for now...

Rhody... :confused:

Edit:

lower case: n,d,h,p,u,f,t,g,n light green with deep purple screen white letters
lower case; f,o,t,w light green with black screen white letters

Less characters this time, with new o and w thrown in for good measure.
This is what I see at home with my high def monitor, 1680 X 1050 pixels, 60 hz refresh rate, true color 32 bit and black background. I tried it with and without glasses, I have tinted lenses and the letters stay the same color, although a bit fuzzy. So the way the display is built and sent to the eye definitely is a factor. I just wish I could explain it because I have not seen any references to grapheme ->color synesthesia like this before. Had I come up with a variable background test program I would have seen this long ago. I am at a loss for the moment to explain it.

Rhody... :confused:
 
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  • #275


fuzzyfelt said:
Also, rhody, would you mind elaborating on the maps mentioned that resemble pianos and piano keys, or are there links, please?

Hi Fuzzy,

I wanted to address the auditory cortex map differentiation insight that I have gained in the course of probing the fragmented sound -> color synesthesia summarized by waht in https://www.physicsforums.com/showpost.php?p=2770341&postcount=237". Auditory cortex layout and function is described in detail in Dr Merzenich's research in the book, "The Brain that Changes itself".

The following three links (not taken from the book help illustrate this: Note: processing applies to speech http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/e/ec/Auditory_Cortex_Frequency_Mapping.svg/800px-Auditory_Cortex_Frequency_Mapping.svg.png" [Broken].

The auditory cortex is mapped like the keys of a piano (see link 1), with low notes on the left side, with frequency ascending from left to right. Humans are born with their auditory cortex that must be "molded" during the "critical period" that fully differentiates the piano key maps that are seen in toddlers that have developed a normal spectra of frequencies into different bands. I included link 2 to show how auditory signals are processed. Link 3 provides greater detail of how auditory processing occurs from the ear inward, if you scroll about halfway down in the description you will see a nice layout of the auditory cortex and how it applies mainly to "speech perception". I understand this is not the same as for musical interpretation, however, the mapping of the auditory cortex is critical for both speech and music processing, a poorly differentiated auditory cortex means that hearing then accurately processing speech or musical composition in the brain is virtually impossible. If a person's auditory maps are not stimulated as infants correctly (they say exposing babies to classical music is recommended, now I understand the reason why, to differentiate the brain auditory cortex maps correctly.) There is research to suggest that when a child is raised new continuous sources of white noise, without clear frequency separation, that this condition if experienced in the first two years of life, combined with the genes that trigger autism can lead to autism. As long as the brain remains open or plastic this condition can be improved through correct exposure to a variety of sounds of varying intensities and pitches, both upward and downward. This exposure is critical. White noise that continuously bombards the auditory cortex in infants causes many brain maps to be poorly differentiated, not just the auditory cortex, which in turn leads to the many learning disorders experienced by children diagnosed with autism. There is more evidence that people who have perfect pitch have it run in families, which may be another gene expression that when mapped to the auditory cortex results in a perfect cortex, then it would be interesting to compare rFMRI scans to processing of music for those who have perfect pitch with those who don't, I suspect more fine detail appearing in the auditory cortex for those with perfect pitch than for those who don't.

waht's music -> color partial synesthesia if I remember correctly was in lower frequencies, around 1Khz to around 2.5 Khz, so taken in context the cells in the piano key area of his auditory cortex also coincide with color maps when music that matches the types noted in his experience occur. Pretty cool, if you ask me.

That's about it for now, on vacation in Aruba, I have one more lesson in para-sailing lesson tomorrow, actually up on a surf board, it is pretty scary, those things require exquisite motor control/timing to function properly, my brain is "not mapped" for confident control, and the power of the para-sail in the wind here in Aruba is intimidating.

Rhody...
 
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  • #276


Frame Dragger said:
On a purely anecdotal note, my trumpet instructer (and now friend) claims to have the experience of percieving certain notes as having a colour. I've never had a reason to believe otherwise, and he was drawn to the music BECAUSE of that, or so he says. Considering that he previously worked in a wool-mill, and had no formal musical education... I'm not surprised.

I think major chords and scales are typically described as "bright," while minor ones are "dark." I don't know which came first, the division of piano keys into white and black with all minor chords requiring the use of black notes, or the classification of the harmonies into bright and dark.

More to the theme of color, 7th chords such as C7 or G7 sound "green" to me for some reason. I don't know if this is random and personal or if there's some cultural learning that promotes the association.
 
  • #277


Thanks very much, rhody, for the impressive reply which has given me a lot to think about!
 
  • #278


Thought I'd add a bit to this threads subject. for as long as I can recall sound notes have a strong emotional association. music will induce certain emotional feelings that may or may not be appropriate to the type of music. i.e. extreme rage to a slow melody. I always assumed everyone felt this as it's commonly explained that music soothes the soul. However the clear and strong feelings I get from notes can be a bit much and as such I don't listen to music much, that and most music today imparts a strong feeling of either anger or revulsion.

sound in general has emotion tied to it for me, music is just the worst of it though. As a kid I was tested and found that I have extremely sensitive hearing and sight, which brings me to the other odd sense that once again until just last week I kid you not, thought was common. I can see IR shadows not the full IR spectrum. I'm trying to filter out where exactly it dies off. It was late afternoon and I was working in the backyard it was a nice clear sunny day 70*F and as I was looking down I noticed an increase in what appeared to be cloud shadows, I look up and it's clear as a bell. I look down and realize it's the thermal heat from the roof and it's casting moving shadows. I asked my wife if she could see it and she thought I had lost my marbles.

I'm blue eyed and there is some correlation to light sensitivity and pigment. I can adjust to dark rooms easily and can see in what most consider pitch black. I also had a habit as kid that drove my mom nuts saying I was going to ruin my vision my reading in the dark. I can still do this as the printing actually becomes a dark rust red tone. bright sunny days will induce pain.

now here's some input to the alcohol methamphetamine question. I have for the last yr been taking adderall and when on the meds it reduces the effects of sound/emotion and visual sensitivity. If I skip the meds or reduce it down they come back. alcohol can increase the sensations to a point and it really depends on the type. beer is non-effective, tequila is BAD I avoid that stuff as it makes it worse. rum and whiskeys are mild in efficacy.

of the two the UV vision thing fascinates me, I would explain it this way. the depiction of a mirage where across the horizon you see the distortion due to the thermal risers and light scattering, now imagine that with everything you look at. thankfully it's not to bad as most things are within a certain range of temperature, but some objects are colder than one would think and it's those that have a clarity, objects that radiate have a subtle wavy distortion of shadows. is it synesthesia ? not sure but to me its like seeing temperature and thought everyone did, it does explain why people are obsessed with thermometers, I thought it was just a way to put a number on what you saw/felt.
 
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  • #279


Wow, and thanks, such a strongly emotional response to sound, and also seeing temperature are fascinating additions to this thread that I’d like to think more about, but am not likely to get back for a while.

Just to start, however, since you say responses don’t always seem appropriate to the music, do you notice specific correlations? And as you mention notes for one, do you have absolute or relative pitch?

I agree, the temperature vision is very interesting. Just repeating, although always seeing temperatures you particularly notice extremes, cold having more clarity. And I’m confused about whether the images are described as shadows or as casting shadows, or both? My blue eyes obviously aren’t nearly as sensitive.

The differing affects of meds and types of alcohol is interesting, too.
 
  • #280


Madhatter,

Welcome to this long lived and amazing thread. You state you have extremely sensitive sight and hearing. I think it is kind of cool that you naturally assumed for a long time that everyone had the same sensitivities to sound and light. I am glad it has not become a problem for you because of fear, phobia's etc... or physical distraction that could result in injury. I want to focus on the IR part.

Your situation is the first I have ever heard anywhere about seeing partial IR frequencies as shadows, see http://www2.chemistry.msu.edu/faculty/reusch/VirtTxtJml/Spectrpy/InfraRed/infrared.htm" [Broken]. You said in your post:
I was looking down I noticed an increase in what appeared to be cloud shadows, I look up and it's clear as a bell. I look down and realize it's the thermal heat from the roof and it's casting moving shadows.

If the heat was rising from your roof, it would rise almost vertically, correct ? If the sun was hitting those rising plumes of IR waves, I am having trouble visualizing it, I assume from an angle that would (for you) cause the distortion to strike the ground where you said you saw it. Would it be possible to rough sketch and post what you saw.

In addition you said you can read letters in a dark room, I assume white paper, black lettering. If you click the first link above the color your describe the letters being closely match the blood red color on the low side of the visible spectrum, bordering on the cusp of the beginning of the IR frequencies. I don't think that is by coincidence either. I will have to ponder that some more. Fuzzy, or anyone else with an educated opinion, feel free to jump in here.

From the hyper-physics link above: I believe the technically correct term is "near infrared" where you are visualizing whatever it is you are seeing, see explanation below:
The term "infrared" refers to a broad range of frequencies, beginning at the top end of those frequencies used for communication and extending up the the low frequency (red) end of the visible spectrum. The wavelength range is from about 1 millimeter down to 750 nm. The range adjacent to the visible spectrum is called the "near infrared" and the longer wavelength part is called "far infrared".

Now the big question becomes what range: from 1 mm down to 750 nano-meters is you perception happening in.

Are you willing to probe your sensitivity range of frequencies and wavelengths through question and answer. Using this technique, we were able to distinguish PF member "waht's" partial sound -> color synesthesia, narrowing it to a limited frequency range. I don't know if this will be possible in the millimeter to nano-meter range, unless we have some sensitive and expensive equipment to measure. Creative thinking may help. I am open to suggestions.

Lastly, Do any other family members have the same condition. Do you remember at what age did you first started to notice notice this, and were there any things that happened to you in childhood that could have triggered it ?

Rhody...

P.S. Hi, Fuzzy, glad to see you active in this thread again, hopefully there is more for the PF peanut gallery to explore and learn.
 
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<h2>1. What is synesthesia?</h2><p>Synesthesia is a neurological condition in which a person's senses are involuntarily mixed or blended together. This means that a person may perceive one sense (such as hearing) through another sense (such as seeing).</p><h2>2. What are the different types of synesthesia?</h2><p>There are many different types of synesthesia, but the most common types involve the blending of colors with letters, numbers, or music. Other types may involve the association of tastes with specific words or textures with certain sounds.</p><h2>3. Is synesthesia a disorder?</h2><p>No, synesthesia is not considered a disorder. It is a unique and relatively rare trait that is not harmful to the individual experiencing it. In fact, many people with synesthesia see it as a gift that enhances their perception of the world.</p><h2>4. How is synesthesia diagnosed?</h2><p>Synesthesia is typically diagnosed through self-reporting and observation. There is no specific test for synesthesia, but a person may be asked to describe their experiences and undergo sensory tests to confirm the presence of synesthetic associations.</p><h2>5. Can synesthesia be treated or cured?</h2><p>There is currently no known cure for synesthesia, and it is not typically treated unless it causes significant distress or impairment in daily life. Some individuals may learn to manage their synesthesia through therapy or coping techniques, but for many, it is simply a part of their perception and cannot be changed.</p>

1. What is synesthesia?

Synesthesia is a neurological condition in which a person's senses are involuntarily mixed or blended together. This means that a person may perceive one sense (such as hearing) through another sense (such as seeing).

2. What are the different types of synesthesia?

There are many different types of synesthesia, but the most common types involve the blending of colors with letters, numbers, or music. Other types may involve the association of tastes with specific words or textures with certain sounds.

3. Is synesthesia a disorder?

No, synesthesia is not considered a disorder. It is a unique and relatively rare trait that is not harmful to the individual experiencing it. In fact, many people with synesthesia see it as a gift that enhances their perception of the world.

4. How is synesthesia diagnosed?

Synesthesia is typically diagnosed through self-reporting and observation. There is no specific test for synesthesia, but a person may be asked to describe their experiences and undergo sensory tests to confirm the presence of synesthetic associations.

5. Can synesthesia be treated or cured?

There is currently no known cure for synesthesia, and it is not typically treated unless it causes significant distress or impairment in daily life. Some individuals may learn to manage their synesthesia through therapy or coping techniques, but for many, it is simply a part of their perception and cannot be changed.

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