Psychophysiological evidence for the genuineness of swimming-style colour synaesthesia |
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Authors: | Nicolas Rothen Danko Nikolić Uta Maria Jürgens Aleksandra Mroczko-Wąsowicz Josephine Cock Beat Meier |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Psychology and Center for Cognition, Learning and Memory, University of Bern, Bern, Switzerland;2. Max-Planck-Institute for Brain Research, Frankfurt, Germany;3. Frankfurt Institute for Advanced Studies, J. W. Goethe University, Frankfurt, Germany;4. Department of Psychology, University of Zagreb, Zagreb, Croatia;5. National Yang-Ming University, Institute of Philosophy of Mind and Cognition, Taipei, Taiwan |
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Abstract: | Recently, swimming-style colour synaesthesia was introduced as a new form of synaesthesia. A synaesthetic Stroop test was used to establish its genuineness. Since Stroop interference can occur for any type of overlearned association, in the present study we used a modified Stroop test and psychophysiological synaesthetic conditioning to further establish the genuineness of this form of synaesthesia. We compared the performance of a swimming-style colour synaesthete and a control who was trained on swimming-style colour associations. Our results showed that behavioural aspects of swimming-style colour synaesthesia can be mimicked in a trained control. Importantly, however, our results showed a psychophysiological conditioning effect for the synaesthete only. We discuss the theoretical relevance of swimming-style colour synaesthesia according to different models of synaesthesia. We conclude that swimming-style colour synaesthesia is a genuine form of synaesthesia, can be mimicked behaviourally in non-synaesthetes, and is best explained by a re-entrant feedback model. |
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