AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigated the relationship between synesthesia and two other cognitive experiences: mirror-touch (feeling tactile sensations from seeing others touched) and ticker tape (visualizing spoken words).
  • A large sample (n = 3743) showed that synesthetes reported higher occurrences of both mirror-touch and ticker tape compared to non-synesthetes, although the effects were small and response bias may have influenced results.
  • The study found no significant differences in prevalence based on gender or work/study fields, with ticker tape estimated to occur in about 7% of the population and grapheme-personification being the most common synesthesia subtype at around 12%.

Article Abstract

A fundamental question in the field of synesthesia is whether it is associated with other cognitive phenomena. The current study examined synesthesia's connections with phenomenal traits of mirror-touch and ticker tape experiences, as well as the representation of the three phenomena in the population, across gender and domain of work/study. Mirror-touch is the automatic, involuntary experience of tactile sensation on one's own body when others are being touched. For example, seeing another person's arm being stroked can evoke physical touch sensation on one's own arm. Ticker tape is the automatic visualization of spoken words or thoughts, such as a teleprompter. For example, when spoken to, a ticker taper might see mentally the spoken words displayed in front of his face or as coming out of the speaker's mouth. To explore synesthesia's associations with these phenomena, a diverse group (n = 3743) was systematically recruited from eight universities and one public museum in France to complete an online screening. Of the 1017 eligible respondents, synesthetes (across all subtypes) reported higher rates of mirror-touch and ticker tape than non-synesthetes, suggesting that synesthesia is associated with these phenomenal traits. However, effect sizes were small and we could not rule out that response bias influenced these associations. Mirror-touch and ticker tape were independent. No differences were found across gender or domain of work and study in prevalence of synesthesia, mirror-touch or ticker tape. The prevalence of ticker tape, unknown so far, was estimated at about 7%, an intermediate rate between estimates of grapheme-color (2-4%) and sequence-space synesthesia (9-14%). Within synesthesia, grapheme-personification, also called ordinal-linguistic personification (OLP) was the most common subtype and was estimated around 12%. Co-occurences of the different types of synesthesia were higher than chance, though at the level of small effect sizes.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3819640PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2013.00776DOI Listing

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