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Ideasthesia

Ideasthesia (alternative spelling ideaesthesia) is a neuropsychological phenomenon in which activations of concepts (inducers) evoke perception-like sensory experiences (concurrents). The name comes from the Ancient Greek ἰδέα (idéa) and αἴσθησις (aísthēsis), meaning 'sensing concepts' or 'sensing ideas'. The notion was introduced by neuroscientist Danko Nikolić as an alternative explanation for a set of phenomena traditionally covered by synesthesia.[1]

Example of associations between graphemes and colors that are described more accurately as ideasthesia than as synesthesia

While synesthesia meaning 'union of senses' implies the association of two sensory elements with little connection to the cognitive level, empirical evidence indicated that most phenomena linked to synesthesia are in fact induced by semantic representations. That is, the linguistic meaning of the stimulus is what is important rather than its sensory properties. In other words, while synesthesia presumes that both the trigger (inducer) and the resulting experience (concurrent) are of sensory nature, ideasthesia presumes that only the resulting experience is of sensory nature while the trigger is semantic.[2][3][4][5][6][7]

Research has later extended the concept to topics other than synesthesia, and since it turned out to be applicable to everyday perception, the concept has developed into a theory of how we perceive. For example ideasthesia has been applied to the theory of art and could bear important implications in explaining human conscious experience, which, according to ideasthesia, is grounded in how we activate concepts.[8]

Examples and evidence edit

 
A drawing by a synesthete which illustrates time unit-space synesthesia/ideasthesia. The months in a year are organized into a circle surrounding the synesthete's body, each month having a fixed location in space and a unique color.

A common example of synesthesia is the association between graphemes and colors, usually referred to as grapheme–color synesthesia. Here, letters of the alphabet are associated with vivid experiences of color. Studies have indicated that the perceived color is context-dependent and is determined by the extracted meaning of a stimulus. For example, an ambiguous stimulus '5' that can be interpreted either as 'S' or '5' will have the color associated with 'S' or with '5', depending on the context in which it is presented. If presented among numbers, it will be interpreted as '5' and will associate the respective color. If presented among letters, it will be interpreted as 'S' and will associate the respective synesthetic color.[2]

Evidence for grapheme-color synesthesia comes also from the finding that colors can be flexibly associated to graphemes, as new meanings become assigned to those graphemes. In one study synesthetes were presented with Glagolitic letters that they have never seen before, and the meaning was acquired through a short writing exercise. The Glagolitic graphemes inherited the colors of the corresponding Latin graphemes as soon as the Glagolitic graphemes acquired the new meaning.[3]

In another study, synesthetes were prompted to form novel synesthetic associations to graphemes never seen before. Synesthetes created those associations within minutes or seconds – which was time too short to account for creation of new physical connections between color representation and grapheme representation areas in the brain,[9] pointing again towards ideasthesia. Although the time course is consistent with postsynaptic AMPA receptor upregulation or NMDA receptor coactivation, or both, which would imply that the realtime experience is invoked at the synaptic level of analysis prior to establishment of novel wiring per se, a very intuitively appealing model.

For lexical–gustatory synesthesia evidence also points towards ideasthesia: in lexical-gustatory synesthesia, verbalisation of the stimulus is not necessary for the experience of concurrents. Instead, it is sufficient to activate the concept.[4]

Another case of synesthesia is swimming-style synesthesia in which each swimming style is associated with a vivid experience of a color.[5][10] These synesthetes do not need to perform the actual movements of a corresponding swimming style. To activate the concurrent experiences, it is sufficient to activate the concept of a swimming style (e.g., by presenting a photograph of a swimmer or simply talking about swimming).[11]

It has been argued that grapheme-color synesthesia for geminate consonants also provides evidence for ideasthesia.[12]

In pitch-color synesthesia, the same tone will be associated with different colors depending on how it has been named; do-sharp (i.e. di) will have colors similar to do (e.g., a reddish color) and re-flat (i.e. ra) will have color similar to that of re (e.g., yellowish), although the two classes refer to the same tone.[13] Similar semantic associations have been found between the acoustic characteristics of vowels and the notion of size.[14]

There are synesthetic experiences that can occur just once in a lifetime, and are thus dubbed one-shot synesthesia. Investigation of such cases has indicated that such unique experiences typically occur when a synesthete is involved in an intensive mental and emotional activity such as making important plans for one's future or reflecting on one's life. It has been thus concluded that this is also a form of ideasthesia.[15]

In normal perception edit

 
Which one would be called Bouba and which Kiki? Responses are highly consistent among people. This is an example of ideasthesia as the conceptualization of the stimulus plays an important role.

Over the past decade,[as of?] it has been suggested that the Bouba/Kiki phenomenon is a case of ideasthesia.[16][17][18] Most people will agree that the star-shaped object on the left is named Kiki and the round one on the right Bouba.[19][20] It has been assumed that these associations come from direct connections between visual and auditory cortices.[20] For example, according to that hypothesis, representations of sharp inflections in the star-shaped object would be physically connected to the representations of sharp inflection in the sound of Kiki. However, Gomez et al.[16][21] have shown that Kiki/Bouba associations are much richer as either word and either image is associated semantically to a number of concepts such as white or black color, feminine vs. masculine, cold vs. hot, and others. These sound–shape associations seem to be related through a large overlap between semantic networks of Kiki and star-shape on the one hand, and Bouba and round-shape on the other hand. For example, both Kiki and star-shape are clever, small, thin and nervous. This indicates that behind Kiki-Bouba effect lies a rich semantic network. In other words, our sensory experience is largely determined by the meaning that we assign to stimuli. Food description and wine tasting is another domain in which ideasthetic association between flavor and other modalities such as shape may play an important role.[22] These semantic-like relations play a role in successful marketing; the name of a product should match its other characteristics.[23]

Implications for development of synesthesia edit

The concept of ideasthesia bears implications for understanding how synesthesia develops in children. Synesthetic children may associate concrete sensory-like experiences primarily to the abstract concepts that they have otherwise difficulties dealing with.[8] Synesthesia may thus be used as a cognitive tool to cope with the abstractness of the learning materials imposed by the educational system – referred to also as a "semantic vacuum hypothesis". This hypothesis explains why the most common inducers in synesthesia are graphemes and time units – both relating to the first truly abstract ideas that a child needs to master.[24]

Implications for art theory edit

The concept of ideasthesia has been often discussed in relation to art,[25][26][27][28][29][30][31][32] and also used to formulate a psychological theory of art.[33] According to the theory, we consider something to be a piece of art when experiences induced by the piece are accurately balanced with semantics induced by the same piece. Thus, a piece of art makes us both strongly think and strongly experience. Moreover, the two must be perfectly balanced such that the most salient stimulus or event is both the one that evokes strongest experiences (fear, joy, ... ) and strongest cognition (recall, memory, ...) – in other words, idea is well balanced with aesthesia.

Ideasthesia theory of art may be used for psychological studies of aesthetics. It may also help explain classificatory disputes about art as its main tenet is that experience of art can only be individual, depending on person's unique knowledge, experiences and history.[33] There could exist no general classification of art satisfactorily applicable to each and all individuals.

Neurophysiology of ideasthesia edit

Ideasthesia is congruent with the theory of brain functioning known as practopoiesis.[34] According to that theory, concepts are not an emergent property of highly developed, specialized neuronal networks in the brain, as is usually assumed; rather, concepts are proposed to be fundamental to the very adaptive principles by which living systems and the brain operate.[35]

A study using magnetoencephalography has shown that color information is available in the brain signal ~200 milliseconds later when accessed via synesthesia in comparison to direct color perception, which is consistent with conceptual mediation.[36] The study supports the idea that synesthesia is a semantic phenomenon – i.e., ideasthesia.

See also edit

  • Aesthetics – Branch of philosophy dealing with the nature of art, beauty, and taste
  • Charles Bonnet syndrome – visual disturbances and the experience of complex visual hallucinations in a blind person
  • Classificatory disputes about art – Disputes about what should and should not be classified as art
  • Consciousness – Awareness of internal and external existence
  • Explanatory gap – Inability to describe conscious experiences in solely physical or structural terms
  • Mind–body problem – Open question in philosophy of how abstract minds interact with physical bodies
  • New mysterianism – Philosophical position on the mind-body problem
  • Perception – Interpretation of sensory information
  • Phantom eye syndrome – condition of pain in a lost eye
  • Phantom limb – Sensation that an amputated or missing limb is attached
  • Philosophical zombie – Thought experiment in philosophy
  • Pictogram – Ideogram that conveys its meaning through its pictorial resemblance to a physical object
  • Practopoiesis – set of interacting or interdependent entities forming an integrated whole that are able to respond to environmental changes, analogous to physiological homeostasis or evolutionary adaptation in biology
  • Qualia – Instances of subjective experience
  • Sentience – Ability to be aware of feelings and sensations
  • Sound symbolism – Study in linguistics
  • Synesthesia – Neurological condition involving the crossing of senses

References edit

  1. ^ Nikolić, D. (2009). "Is synaesthesia actually ideaesthesia? An inquiry into the nature of the phenomenon". Proceedings of the Third International Congress on Synaesthesia, Science & Art, Granada, Spain, April 26–29, 2009. S2CID 44135322.
  2. ^ a b Dixon, M.J., Smilek, D., Duffy, P.L., Zanna, P. M., Merikle, P. M. (2006) The Role of Meaning in Grapheme-Colour Synaesthesia, Cortex 42: 243-252.
  3. ^ a b Mroczko A., T. Metzinger, W. Singer, D. Nikolić (2009) Immediate transfer of synesthesia to a novel inducer. Journal of Vision, 9: 2521-2528.
  4. ^ a b Simner, J.; Ward, J. (2006) The taste of words on the tip of the tongue, Nature 444: 438.
  5. ^ a b Nikolić, D., U.M. Jürgens, N. Rothen, B. Meier, A. Mroczko (2011) Swimming-style synesthesia. Cortex, 47(7):874-879.
  6. ^ Chiou, R., Rich N.A. (2014) The role of conceptual knowledge in understanding synaesthesia: Evaluating contemporary findings from a ‘hub-and-spoke’perspective. Frontiers in Psychology, 5: 105.
  7. ^ Curwen, C. (2018). Music-colour synaesthesia: Concept, context and qualia. Consciousness and Cognition, 61, 94-106.
  8. ^ a b Mroczko-Wąsowicz, A., Nikolić D. (2014) Semantic mechanisms may be responsible for developing synesthesia. Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 8:509. doi:10.3389/fnhum.2014.00509
  9. ^ Jürgens U.M., Nikolić D. (2012) Ideaesthesia: Conceptual processes assign similar colours to similar shapes. Translational Neuroscience, 3(1): 22-27.
  10. ^ Mroczko-Wąsowicz, Aleksandra, and Markus Werning. Synesthesia, sensory-motor contingency, and semantic emulation: how swimming style-color synesthesia challenges the traditional view of synesthesia. Frontiers in Psychology 3 (2012).
  11. ^ Jarrett, C. (2014). Great myths of the brain. John Wiley & Sons.
  12. ^ Weaver, D.F., Hawco C.L.A. (2015) Geminate consonant grapheme-colour synaesthesia (ideaesthesia). BMC Neurology, 15:112.
  13. ^ Itoh, K., Sakata, H., Kwee, I. L., & Nakada, T. (2017). Musical pitch classes have rainbow hues in pitch class-color synesthesia. Scientific reports, 7(1), 17781.
  14. ^ Hoshi, H., Kwon, N., Akita, K., & Auracher, J. (2019). Semantic Associations Dominate Over Perceptual Associations in Vowel–Size Iconicity. i-Perception, 10(4), 2041669519861981.
  15. ^ Kirschner, A., & Nikolić, D. (2017). One-shot synesthesia. Translational Neuroscience, 8(1), 167-175.
  16. ^ a b Gómez Milán, E., Iborra, O., de Córdoba, M.J., Juárez-Ramos V., Rodríguez Artacho, M.A., Rubio, J.L. (2013) The Kiki-Bouba effect: A case of personification and ideaesthesia. The Journal of Consciousness Studies. 20(1-2): pp. 84-102.
  17. ^ Shukla, A. (2016). The Kiki-Bouba paradigm: Where senses meet and greet. Indian Journal of Mental Health, 3(3), 240-252.
  18. ^ De Carolis, L., Marsico, E., Arnaud, V., & Coupé, C. (2018). Assessing sound symbolism: Investigating phonetic forms, visual shapes and letter fonts in an implicit bouba-kiki experimental paradigm. PLOS ONE, 13(12), e0208874.https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0208874
  19. ^ Köhler, W (1929). Gestalt Psychology. New York: Liveright.
  20. ^ a b Ramachandran, VS & Hubbard, EM (2001) Synaesthesia: A window into perception, thought and language. Journal of Consciousness Studies 8(12): 3–34.
  21. ^ Milán, Emilio Gómez, Oscar Iborra Martínez, and María José de Córdoba Serrano. El Universo Kiki-Bouba: Ideaestesia, Empatía y Neuromárketing. Fundación Internacional artecittà, 2014.
  22. ^ Spence, Charles, and Ophelia Deroy. On the shapes of flavours: A review of four hypotheses. Theoria et Historia Scientiarum 10 (2014): 207-238.
  23. ^ Bridger, D. (2015). Decoding the irrational consumer: How to commission, run and generate insights from neuromarketing research. Kogan Page Publishers.
  24. ^ Rapp, B., & Caramazza, A. (1997). From graphemes to abstract letter shapes: levels of representation in written spelling. Journal of experimental psychology: human perception and performance, 23(4), 1130.
  25. ^ Gsöllpointner, Katharina. "DIE KUNST DER SINNE–DIE SINNE DER KUNST." Exploring Cybernetics: Kybernetik im interdisziplinären Diskurs (2015): 137-165.
  26. ^ Albertazzi, Liliana, et al. "The hue of angles—was Kandinsky right?." Art & Perception 3.1 (2015): 81-92.
  27. ^ Mărginaş, Raluca. "The Spurious Case of Synesthesia in the Popular Arts." Ekphrasis 1 (2012): 144-151.
  28. ^ Johnson, A. (2017). Hendrick ter Brugghen's Musicians and the Engagement of the Viewer. Temple University.
  29. ^ Prendergast, J. (2018). Grinding the moor–ideasthesia and narrative. New Writing, 1-17.
  30. ^ Prendergast, J. (2020). Ideasthetic imagining—patterns and deviations in affective immersion. New Writing, 1-19.
  31. ^ Prendergast, J. (2022). Ideasthetic imagining: Writing as dream-membering. TEXT, 26(Special 68), 1-20.
  32. ^ Kosowitz, S. (2022). Evaluating ideasthesia as a creative tool in compositional practice: A personal reflection on coloured hearing synesthesia. https://ro.ecu.edu.au/theses_hons/1595
  33. ^ a b Nikolić D. (2016) Ideasthesia and art. In: Gsöllpointner, Katharina, et al. (eds.). 2016. Digital Synesthesia. A Model for the Aesthetics of Digital Art. Berlin/Boston: De Gruyter (http://ieet.org/index.php/IEET/print/11666)
  34. ^ van Leeuwen, T. M., Singer, W., & Nikolić, D. (2015) The merit of synesthesia for consciousness research. Frontiers in psychology, 6, 1850.
  35. ^ Nikolić, D. (2015). Practopoiesis: Or how life fosters a mind. Journal of Theoretical Biology, 373, 40-61.
  36. ^ L. Teichmann, T. Grootswagers, D. Moerel, T. A. Carlson, A. N. Rich. (2021) Temporal dissociation of neural activity underlying synesthetic and perceptual colors. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 118 (6) e2020434118; doi:10.1073/pnas.2020434118

External links edit

  • TED Ed video explaining ideasthesia
  • Danko Nikolić's website on Ideasthesia
  • Swimming-style synesthesia described by New Scientist
  • Audio Criticism & Ideasthesia
  • A YouTube video of a lecture on ideasthesia at SoundThinking conference


ideasthesia, alternative, spelling, ideaesthesia, neuropsychological, phenomenon, which, activations, concepts, inducers, evoke, perception, like, sensory, experiences, concurrents, name, comes, from, ancient, greek, ἰδέα, idéa, αἴσθησις, aísthēsis, meaning, s. Ideasthesia alternative spelling ideaesthesia is a neuropsychological phenomenon in which activations of concepts inducers evoke perception like sensory experiences concurrents The name comes from the Ancient Greek ἰdea idea and aἴs8hsis aisthesis meaning sensing concepts or sensing ideas The notion was introduced by neuroscientist Danko Nikolic as an alternative explanation for a set of phenomena traditionally covered by synesthesia 1 Example of associations between graphemes and colors that are described more accurately as ideasthesia than as synesthesiaWhile synesthesia meaning union of senses implies the association of two sensory elements with little connection to the cognitive level empirical evidence indicated that most phenomena linked to synesthesia are in fact induced by semantic representations That is the linguistic meaning of the stimulus is what is important rather than its sensory properties In other words while synesthesia presumes that both the trigger inducer and the resulting experience concurrent are of sensory nature ideasthesia presumes that only the resulting experience is of sensory nature while the trigger is semantic 2 3 4 5 6 7 Research has later extended the concept to topics other than synesthesia and since it turned out to be applicable to everyday perception the concept has developed into a theory of how we perceive For example ideasthesia has been applied to the theory of art and could bear important implications in explaining human conscious experience which according to ideasthesia is grounded in how we activate concepts 8 Contents 1 Examples and evidence 2 In normal perception 3 Implications for development of synesthesia 4 Implications for art theory 5 Neurophysiology of ideasthesia 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksExamples and evidence edit nbsp A drawing by a synesthete which illustrates time unit space synesthesia ideasthesia The months in a year are organized into a circle surrounding the synesthete s body each month having a fixed location in space and a unique color A common example of synesthesia is the association between graphemes and colors usually referred to as grapheme color synesthesia Here letters of the alphabet are associated with vivid experiences of color Studies have indicated that the perceived color is context dependent and is determined by the extracted meaning of a stimulus For example an ambiguous stimulus 5 that can be interpreted either as S or 5 will have the color associated with S or with 5 depending on the context in which it is presented If presented among numbers it will be interpreted as 5 and will associate the respective color If presented among letters it will be interpreted as S and will associate the respective synesthetic color 2 Evidence for grapheme color synesthesia comes also from the finding that colors can be flexibly associated to graphemes as new meanings become assigned to those graphemes In one study synesthetes were presented with Glagolitic letters that they have never seen before and the meaning was acquired through a short writing exercise The Glagolitic graphemes inherited the colors of the corresponding Latin graphemes as soon as the Glagolitic graphemes acquired the new meaning 3 In another study synesthetes were prompted to form novel synesthetic associations to graphemes never seen before Synesthetes created those associations within minutes or seconds which was time too short to account for creation of new physical connections between color representation and grapheme representation areas in the brain 9 pointing again towards ideasthesia Although the time course is consistent with postsynaptic AMPA receptor upregulation or NMDA receptor coactivation or both which would imply that the realtime experience is invoked at the synaptic level of analysis prior to establishment of novel wiring per se a very intuitively appealing model For lexical gustatory synesthesia evidence also points towards ideasthesia in lexical gustatory synesthesia verbalisation of the stimulus is not necessary for the experience of concurrents Instead it is sufficient to activate the concept 4 Another case of synesthesia is swimming style synesthesia in which each swimming style is associated with a vivid experience of a color 5 10 These synesthetes do not need to perform the actual movements of a corresponding swimming style To activate the concurrent experiences it is sufficient to activate the concept of a swimming style e g by presenting a photograph of a swimmer or simply talking about swimming 11 It has been argued that grapheme color synesthesia for geminate consonants also provides evidence for ideasthesia 12 In pitch color synesthesia the same tone will be associated with different colors depending on how it has been named do sharp i e di will have colors similar to do e g a reddish color and re flat i e ra will have color similar to that of re e g yellowish although the two classes refer to the same tone 13 Similar semantic associations have been found between the acoustic characteristics of vowels and the notion of size 14 There are synesthetic experiences that can occur just once in a lifetime and are thus dubbed one shot synesthesia Investigation of such cases has indicated that such unique experiences typically occur when a synesthete is involved in an intensive mental and emotional activity such as making important plans for one s future or reflecting on one s life It has been thus concluded that this is also a form of ideasthesia 15 In normal perception edit nbsp Which one would be called Bouba and which Kiki Responses are highly consistent among people This is an example of ideasthesia as the conceptualization of the stimulus plays an important role Over the past decade as of it has been suggested that the Bouba Kiki phenomenon is a case of ideasthesia 16 17 18 Most people will agree that the star shaped object on the left is named Kiki and the round one on the right Bouba 19 20 It has been assumed that these associations come from direct connections between visual and auditory cortices 20 For example according to that hypothesis representations of sharp inflections in the star shaped object would be physically connected to the representations of sharp inflection in the sound of Kiki However Gomez et al 16 21 have shown that Kiki Bouba associations are much richer as either word and either image is associated semantically to a number of concepts such as white or black color feminine vs masculine cold vs hot and others These sound shape associations seem to be related through a large overlap between semantic networks of Kiki and star shape on the one hand and Bouba and round shape on the other hand For example both Kiki and star shape are clever small thin and nervous This indicates that behind Kiki Bouba effect lies a rich semantic network In other words our sensory experience is largely determined by the meaning that we assign to stimuli Food description and wine tasting is another domain in which ideasthetic association between flavor and other modalities such as shape may play an important role 22 These semantic like relations play a role in successful marketing the name of a product should match its other characteristics 23 Implications for development of synesthesia editThe concept of ideasthesia bears implications for understanding how synesthesia develops in children Synesthetic children may associate concrete sensory like experiences primarily to the abstract concepts that they have otherwise difficulties dealing with 8 Synesthesia may thus be used as a cognitive tool to cope with the abstractness of the learning materials imposed by the educational system referred to also as a semantic vacuum hypothesis This hypothesis explains why the most common inducers in synesthesia are graphemes and time units both relating to the first truly abstract ideas that a child needs to master 24 Implications for art theory editThe concept of ideasthesia has been often discussed in relation to art 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 and also used to formulate a psychological theory of art 33 According to the theory we consider something to be a piece of art when experiences induced by the piece are accurately balanced with semantics induced by the same piece Thus a piece of art makes us both strongly think and strongly experience Moreover the two must be perfectly balanced such that the most salient stimulus or event is both the one that evokes strongest experiences fear joy and strongest cognition recall memory in other words idea is well balanced with aesthesia Ideasthesia theory of art may be used for psychological studies of aesthetics It may also help explain classificatory disputes about art as its main tenet is that experience of art can only be individual depending on person s unique knowledge experiences and history 33 There could exist no general classification of art satisfactorily applicable to each and all individuals Neurophysiology of ideasthesia editIdeasthesia is congruent with the theory of brain functioning known as practopoiesis 34 According to that theory concepts are not an emergent property of highly developed specialized neuronal networks in the brain as is usually assumed rather concepts are proposed to be fundamental to the very adaptive principles by which living systems and the brain operate 35 A study using magnetoencephalography has shown that color information is available in the brain signal 200 milliseconds later when accessed via synesthesia in comparison to direct color perception which is consistent with conceptual mediation 36 The study supports the idea that synesthesia is a semantic phenomenon i e ideasthesia See also editAesthetics Branch of philosophy dealing with the nature of art beauty and taste Charles Bonnet syndrome visual disturbances and the experience of complex visual hallucinations in a blind personPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback Classificatory disputes about art Disputes about what should and should not be classified as art Consciousness Awareness of internal and external existence Explanatory gap Inability to describe conscious experiences in solely physical or structural terms Mind body problem Open question in philosophy of how abstract minds interact with physical bodies New mysterianism Philosophical position on the mind body problem Perception Interpretation of sensory information Phantom eye syndrome condition of pain in a lost eyePages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback Phantom limb Sensation that an amputated or missing limb is attached Philosophical zombie Thought experiment in philosophy Pictogram Ideogram that conveys its meaning through its pictorial resemblance to a physical object Practopoiesis set of interacting or interdependent entities forming an integrated whole that are able to respond to environmental changes analogous to physiological homeostasis or evolutionary adaptation in biologyPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback Qualia Instances of subjective experience Sentience Ability to be aware of feelings and sensations Sound symbolism Study in linguistics Synesthesia Neurological condition involving the crossing of sensesReferences edit Nikolic D 2009 Is synaesthesia actually ideaesthesia An inquiry into the nature of the phenomenon Proceedings of the Third International Congress on Synaesthesia Science amp Art Granada Spain April 26 29 2009 S2CID 44135322 a b Dixon M J Smilek D Duffy P L Zanna P M Merikle P M 2006 The Role of Meaning in Grapheme Colour Synaesthesia Cortex 42 243 252 a b Mroczko A T Metzinger W Singer D Nikolic 2009 Immediate transfer of synesthesia to a novel inducer Journal of Vision 9 2521 2528 a b Simner J Ward J 2006 The taste of words on the tip of the tongue Nature 444 438 a b Nikolic D U M Jurgens N Rothen B Meier A Mroczko 2011 Swimming style synesthesia Cortex 47 7 874 879 Chiou R Rich N A 2014 The role of conceptual knowledge in understanding synaesthesia Evaluating contemporary findings from a hub and spoke perspective Frontiers in Psychology 5 105 Curwen C 2018 Music colour synaesthesia Concept context and qualia Consciousness and Cognition 61 94 106 a b Mroczko Wasowicz A Nikolic D 2014 Semantic mechanisms may be responsible for developing synesthesia Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 8 509 doi 10 3389 fnhum 2014 00509 Jurgens U M Nikolic D 2012 Ideaesthesia Conceptual processes assign similar colours to similar shapes Translational Neuroscience 3 1 22 27 Mroczko Wasowicz Aleksandra and Markus Werning Synesthesia sensory motor contingency and semantic emulation how swimming style color synesthesia challenges the traditional view of synesthesia Frontiers in Psychology 3 2012 Jarrett C 2014 Great myths of the brain John Wiley amp Sons Weaver D F Hawco C L A 2015 Geminate consonant grapheme colour synaesthesia ideaesthesia BMC Neurology 15 112 Itoh K Sakata H Kwee I L amp Nakada T 2017 Musical pitch classes have rainbow hues in pitch class color synesthesia Scientific reports 7 1 17781 Hoshi H Kwon N Akita K amp Auracher J 2019 Semantic Associations Dominate Over Perceptual Associations in Vowel Size Iconicity i Perception 10 4 2041669519861981 Kirschner A amp Nikolic D 2017 One shot synesthesia Translational Neuroscience 8 1 167 175 a b Gomez Milan E Iborra O de Cordoba M J Juarez Ramos V Rodriguez Artacho M A Rubio J L 2013 The Kiki Bouba effect A case of personification and ideaesthesia The Journal of Consciousness Studies 20 1 2 pp 84 102 Shukla A 2016 The Kiki Bouba paradigm Where senses meet and greet Indian Journal of Mental Health 3 3 240 252 De Carolis L Marsico E Arnaud V amp Coupe C 2018 Assessing sound symbolism Investigating phonetic forms visual shapes and letter fonts in an implicit bouba kiki experimental paradigm PLOS ONE 13 12 e0208874 https journals plos org plosone article id 10 1371 journal pone 0208874 Kohler W 1929 Gestalt Psychology New York Liveright a b Ramachandran VS amp Hubbard EM 2001 Synaesthesia A window into perception thought and language Journal of Consciousness Studies 8 12 3 34 Milan Emilio Gomez Oscar Iborra Martinez and Maria Jose de Cordoba Serrano El Universo Kiki Bouba Ideaestesia Empatia y Neuromarketing Fundacion Internacional artecitta 2014 Spence Charles and Ophelia Deroy On the shapes of flavours A review of four hypotheses Theoria et Historia Scientiarum 10 2014 207 238 Bridger D 2015 Decoding the irrational consumer How to commission run and generate insights from neuromarketing research Kogan Page Publishers Rapp B amp Caramazza A 1997 From graphemes to abstract letter shapes levels of representation in written spelling Journal of experimental psychology human perception and performance 23 4 1130 Gsollpointner Katharina DIE KUNST DER SINNE DIE SINNE DER KUNST Exploring Cybernetics Kybernetik im interdisziplinaren Diskurs 2015 137 165 Albertazzi Liliana et al The hue of angles was Kandinsky right Art amp Perception 3 1 2015 81 92 Mărginas Raluca The Spurious Case of Synesthesia in the Popular Arts Ekphrasis 1 2012 144 151 Johnson A 2017 Hendrick ter Brugghen s Musicians and the Engagement of the Viewer Temple University Prendergast J 2018 Grinding the moor ideasthesia and narrative New Writing 1 17 Prendergast J 2020 Ideasthetic imagining patterns and deviations in affective immersion New Writing 1 19 Prendergast J 2022 Ideasthetic imagining Writing as dream membering TEXT 26 Special 68 1 20 Kosowitz S 2022 Evaluating ideasthesia as a creative tool in compositional practice A personal reflection on coloured hearing synesthesia https ro ecu edu au theses hons 1595 a b Nikolic D 2016 Ideasthesia and art In Gsollpointner Katharina et al eds 2016 Digital Synesthesia A Model for the Aesthetics of Digital Art Berlin Boston De Gruyter http ieet org index php IEET print 11666 van Leeuwen T M Singer W amp Nikolic D 2015 The merit of synesthesia for consciousness research Frontiers in psychology 6 1850 Nikolic D 2015 Practopoiesis Or how life fosters a mind Journal of Theoretical Biology 373 40 61 L Teichmann T Grootswagers D Moerel T A Carlson A N Rich 2021 Temporal dissociation of neural activity underlying synesthetic and perceptual colors Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 118 6 e2020434118 doi 10 1073 pnas 2020434118External links editTED Ed video explaining ideasthesia Danko Nikolic s website on Ideasthesia Swimming style synesthesia described by New Scientist Audio Criticism amp Ideasthesia A YouTube video of a lecture on ideasthesia at SoundThinking conference Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ideasthesia amp oldid 1181772341, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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