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Synesthesia

Synesthesia is a neurologically based phenomenon in which stimulation of one sensory or cognitive pathway leads to automatic, involuntary experiences in a second sensory or cognitive pathway. In simple words, it is the confusion between the sense, as when musical notes are experienced as colored.

60 Questions

Is it hard to sleep with Synesthesia?

Not at all. Synesthesia has no disadvantages other than a synesthete doesn't know what it is like to percieve things normally. Synesthesia will only enhance sleep if anything. I should know - I am one lol.

I'm not saying that the above isn't true. however, i think that it would be a matter of opinion.

How does the brain interpret color when you have synesthesia?

Can you clarify this question a little? If you mean how do synesthetes see colors of things such as trees, toys, cars, and so on, then the answer is normally. Synesthesia does not change the colors of the outside world. So a synesthete will see the same green car that a non-synesthete will see.

Synesthetes will see colors to things that non-synesthetes will see no color. For example, a piece of music will have color to a music-color synesthete. In this regard, synesthetic colors are normal colors with the exceptions that (1) some colors will seem to be mixed together but still separate at the same time (such as a number being both blue and red at the same time - but notpurple!) or (2) some colors cannot be described (such as a mixture of two colors that one doesn't normally see) or don't seem to be in existence anywhere in the outside world.

What are facts about synesthesia?

Synesthesia is a comparatively rare phenomena or condition that is reported to occur in 1 in every 500 to 25,000 people. Synesthesia facts suggest that this condition is found more in females as compared to males. The male is to female ratio is said to be at 5:1. The word synesthesia has its roots in Greek literature and means dual or joined senses. Synesthesia facts can tell you that synesthetes may have new approaches to sounds and colors than a normal human being. They may associate color with music and smell with images. There are many proved facts and examples of synesthesia occurrences and scientists are at present engaged to find out more about the condition and how it can be used to solve many mysteries.

Does Patrick stump have grapheme-color synesthesia?

He clams to have it, but usually those that claim it have to undergo a review by psychologists.

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Being more muscially inclined, i thought he'd have sound-color, where one would see colors when they heard sounds

Why might a writer choose to use synesthesia?

to offer the reader a surprising way of experiencing the senses

What is synestesia?

Synesthesia is a phenomenon in which the senses in the brain are crossed over each other. For example, the sense of hearing might also stimulate the sense of taste for a person affected by synesthesia. This means that when the affected person hears a certain sound, they might taste a certain thing at the same time, even if they are not actually eating anything.

How do you know if you have synthesia?

I am a real synesthete (that is what they are called). First of all, you cannot start synesthesia. You must be born with it. Synesthesia is not one thing, every synesthete has their own synetic way. The main thing is that somewhere in your brain, the five sences wires are mixed up. it is not a bad thing. it just means u r diffrent from others. For example, if u c a certain thing you might feel it. or if u c a letter u see a certain.

What causes synesthesia?

The causes of synesthesia remain unknown. Some scientists have suggested that everyone is born synesthetic but that the typical developmental trajectory results in these highly interconnected brain areas have become far more segregated. We do not know why synesthetes retain some of these anomalous connections. A biological determinant may be partially at work in certain cases of synesthesia, because the condition tends to run in families; moreover, nearly six times as many women as men report synesthesia. Whatever its causes or origins, synesthesia provides cognitive neuroscientists with a unique opportunity to learn more about how the brain creates our perceptual reality.

Synesthesia is a relatively rare condition, reported to occur in 1 in every 250 to 25,000 people, although these estimates are not based on good scientific evidence and many researchers believe it is more common than previously stated. It is probably best thought of as a family of related conditions. Different neurological mechanisms may be responsible for different types of synesthesia.

When was Synesthesia first discovered?

The first reference to synesthesia may be in John Locke's An Essay Concerning Human Understanding, written in 1689. Locke writes of a blind man who thought the color scarlet was "like the sound of a trumpet." Nonetheless, Pythagoras and Aristotle may have also written about synesthesia much earlier.