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Tasty non-words and neighbours: the cognitive roots of lexical-gustatory synaesthesia. | LitMetric

Tasty non-words and neighbours: the cognitive roots of lexical-gustatory synaesthesia.

Cognition

Psychology, PPLS, University of Edinburgh, 7 George Square, Edinburgh EH8 9JZ, UK.

Published: February 2009

AI Article Synopsis

  • Lexical-gustatory synaesthetes experience tastes linked to words, with the study examining how these tastes relate to word meanings and development, suggesting food-names trigger early synaesthetic experiences.
  • Non-words can also evoke tastes, but this study found their sensations are connected to real-word neighbors, including findings that proximity to real words increases taste associations.
  • The results support the idea that synaesthetic tastes originate from food-names, as non-words resembling food terms yield stronger flavor associations than those with non-food associations.

Article Abstract

For lexical-gustatory synaesthetes, words trigger automatic, associated food sensations (e.g., for JB, the word slope tastes of over-ripe melon). Our study tests two claims about this unusual condition: that synaesthetic tastes are associated with abstract levels of word representation (concepts/lemmas), and that the first tastes to crystallise in early development are those triggered by food-names (e.g., apple tastes of apple; Simner & Ward, 2006). This concept/lemma-based proposal is difficult to immediately reconcile with the finding that non-words may also generate tastes (Ward, Simner, & Auyeung, 2005), since non-words have no concept/lemma representations. We manipulated the characteristics of non-words to provide three types of evidence that non-word tastes in fact stem from real word neighbours: Non-words with neighbours (e.g., keach) are more likely to generate tastes than those with no neighbours (e.g., vilps); pseudo-homophone non-words that are orthographically close to real words (e.g., peeple) are more likely to generate tastes than those that are more distant (baybee); and finally, the tastes of non-words are less consistent, and less intense, than those of real words. Additionally, we test the hypothesis that synaesthetic tastes develop initially from food-names by showing that non-words are more intensely flavoured if they are homophonic with food-names (e.g., toffie) versus non-foods (e.g., peeple). From this we conclude that synaesthetic tastes develop from food-names, and that tasty non-words do not challenge a concept/lemma-based account of lexical-gustatory synaesthesia.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cognition.2008.11.008DOI Listing

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