Gradual consolidation of synesthesia during adolescence: A case study

Thomas Alrik Sørensen, Maria Nordfang, Árni Gunnar Ásgeirsson

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Abstract

Synesthesia is a rare condition in the normal observer where an inducer quale is consistently followed by a second, concurrent quale (Grossenbacher & Lovelace, 2001). Several studies have demonstrated the effects of synesthesia through a number of objective measures; like visual search (Laeng, 2009), visual priming (Mattingley, Rich, Yelland, & Bradshaw, 2001), and the Stroop task (Mills, Boteler, & Oliver, 1999). In a recent study Ásgeirsson, Nordfang, & Sørensen (2015) isolated specific components of attention that are modulated by synesthesia, and which seem to correspond to attentional changes modulated by expertise (Sørensen & Kyllingsbæk, 2012; Dall, Watanabe, & Sørensen, in review). Here we explore a case of a young female synesthete; AR (age 13), who presented an unusual, but consistent, color profile that allowed us to explore the effects of partial color encoding in synesthesia. Interestingly, we were not able to reproduce the attentional modulations reported by Ásgeirsson et al. (2015) as AR did not show any convincing modulation of known attentional parameters.Several studies have demonstrated that synesthesia can be acquired during childhood (e.g. Witthoft & Winawer, 2006), and recently Simner & Bain (2013) has convincingly shown that consolidation of colour-grapheme synaesthesia develop during childhood and early adolescence. Together these studies seem to suggest that the attentional effects seen in adult observers who have colour-grapheme synaesthesia may in fact reflect an expertise related modulation between long-term colour-grapheme associations.To explore this hypothesis a follow-up screening of AR’s colour-grapheme associations revealed that a number of letters are still settling on their final colour association – colour changes that AR herself was unaware of, e.g. that L had changed from red to blue. Additionally, AR’s overall consistency also markedly increased over the ~2 year between the screening sessions, similar to results reported by Simner & Bain (2013).
Original languageEnglish
JournalJournal of Vision
Volume16
Issue number12
ISSN1534-7362
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2016
EventAnnual meeting of the Visual Science Society - The Tradewinds Island Resorts, St. Pete Beach, FL, United States
Duration: 13 May 201618 May 2016
http://www.visionsciences.org/

Conference

ConferenceAnnual meeting of the Visual Science Society
LocationThe Tradewinds Island Resorts
Country/TerritoryUnited States
CitySt. Pete Beach, FL
Period13/05/201618/05/2016
Internet address

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