At the first ever worldwide international conference of psychology in Paris, 1889, one symposium included a round-table event devoted entirely to the neurodevelopmental condition of synesthesia. Details of this seminal gathering on synesthesia and its international reception have been lost to historical obscurity. A synesthesia study committee emerged from this meeting, as well as a new research tool. Moreover, the scientific findings discussed during this symposium would be echoed over a hundred years later, when a new wave of synesthesia research in the late-twentieth century arose. This article sheds new light on this seminal gathering and aims to answer the following historical questions: Why was synesthesia included in this conference? What science was discussed? Who were the members of the committee and how did they come to be involved? What were their contributions to synesthesia research before, during, and after the conference? What has history shown us about the impact of this symposium on the science of synesthesia?
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/0964704X.2020.1747866 | DOI Listing |
Adv Sci (Weinh)
October 2024
Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Pohang University of Science and Technology (POSTECH), Pohang, 37673, Republic of Korea.
Copper (Cu) is widely used as an industrial electrode due to its high electrical conductivity, mechanical properties, and cost-effectiveness. However, Cu is susceptible to corrosion, which degrades device performance over time. Although various methods (alloying, physical passivation, surface treatment, etc.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFConscious Cogn
February 2024
Department of Business Administration, Niigata University of International and Information Studies, 3-1-1, Mizukino, Nishi-ku, Niigata-shi 950-2292, Japan.
Grapheme-color synesthesia is expected to provide a clue to solving the "binding problem" of visual features. Synesthetic research uses non-synesthetes as a control group and shows that synesthetes perform better with synesthetic color congruency, while non-synesthetes' performances do not. However, non-synesthetes also have certain grapheme-color associations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Semiot Law
April 2021
Department of Global Legal Studies, Faculty of Law, University of Macau, Avenida da Universidade, Macao SAR, 999078 China.
The beginning of the twenty-first century saw an apparent change in language in public discourses characterised by the rise of so-called "essentially oxymoronic concepts", i.e., mainly oxymora and paradoxes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Hist Neurosci
August 2021
School of Psychology, University of Sussex, Brighton, UK.
At the first ever worldwide international conference of psychology in Paris, 1889, one symposium included a round-table event devoted entirely to the neurodevelopmental condition of synesthesia. Details of this seminal gathering on synesthesia and its international reception have been lost to historical obscurity. A synesthesia study committee emerged from this meeting, as well as a new research tool.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Natl Acad Sci U S A
May 2020
Department of Psychology, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada V6T 1Z4.
Synesthesia is a neurologic trait in which specific inducers, such as sounds, automatically elicit additional idiosyncratic percepts, such as color (thus "colored hearing"). One explanation for this trait-and the one tested here-is that synesthesia results from unusually weak pruning of cortical synaptic hyperconnectivity during early perceptual development. We tested the prediction from this hypothesis that synesthetes would be superior at making discriminations from nonnative categories that are normally weakened by experience-dependent pruning during a critical period early in development-namely, discrimination among nonnative phonemes (Hindi retroflex /d̪a/ and dental /ɖa/), among chimpanzee faces, and among inverted human faces.
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