Many people dream in color. Some also read and hear in color. In
people with synesthesia, different senses blend in a variety of
ways-one person might see the numeral four as bright yellow, another
might taste cucumbers when she hears words beginning with the letter
"F." And because synesthetes are aware of connections among part of
the brain that the people seem distinct, they may help scientists map
the mind's higher cognitive functions.

Julia Simner, a linguistic psychologist at the University Edinburgh,
is among a new crop of researchers exploring how conceptual thinking
(not simply physical stimuli) may evoke colors and flavors in
synesthetes. By inducing a "tip of the tongue" state-in which a know
expression eludes immediate recall- in synesthetes who taste the
words, Simner discovered that the meanings of words can produce the
same flavors as their sound or written shape. For instance, trying to
remember the term "castanet" caused one woman to taste tuna, the same
flavor triggered when she heard the word. Through this type of "word
tasting,"  Simner is exploring the potential relation between
conceptual thought and perceptual experience.

People with different type of synesthesia, who feel a sensation on
their own body when they observe somebody else being touched, may
provide insight into the genesis of emotions. A University College
London study found that these mirror-touch synesthetes showed higher
capacities for emotional empathy than other did. They may, for
example, experience stronger gut reactions when they see someone in
distress. When trying to rationally imagine how other people feel,
however, the synesthetes scored similarly to everyone else which
suggests that more than one part through the brain ends in empathy.

Many unidentified synesthetes assume their perception of the word is
ordinary. When the study about mirror-touch synesthetes made the news,
many people were surprised to discover that experiencing this type of
disembodied contact is considered unusual. Scientists believe about 4
percent of the population experiences some from of synesthesia and
that the phenomenon probably stems from normal cognitive development
in the womb and early childhood. As the brain grows, a large number of
neural connections are formed. Many of these synapses are then pruned
away as processes in the brain differentiate. Synesthesia may arise
from an incomplete shedding of these connections.

Everyone may possess these same pathways in the brain to some degree,
but most people do not realize it. Simner sees synesthetes as decoders
because "they experience the relationship to conscious awareness."

Happy Learning,

Yovan P. Putra
  


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