Abstract

Grapheme-colour synaesthesia is a condition in which the visual perception of letters or numbers induces a specific colour sensation. In this study, we demonstrated that the apparent physical brightness of graphemes is modulated by the synaesthetic colours elicited by them. Synaesthetes first selected a synaesthetic colour corresponding to each capital letter and digit. Then, we selected a grapheme stimulus with a bright synaesthetic colour and one with a dark colour for each synaesthete. Finally, synaesthetes and non-synaesthete controls participated in a brightness judgment task, in which each participant judged the real brightness of each of the two stimuli compared to a standard stimulus. Compared to non-synaesthetes, synaesthetes judged a grapheme with a bright synaesthetic colour to be brighter than one with a dark synaesthetic colour, suggesting that the synaesthetic colour experience of synaesthetes alters their brightness perception. Such alteration in real brightness perception was observed both in those who experienced synaesthetic colours in external space (projector-type synaesthetes) and in those who experienced such colours ‘in the mind’s eye’ (associator-type synaesthetes). These results support the view that early visual processing is modulated by feedback transmitted from the V4 colour area, the neural activation of which accompanies synaesthetic colour experience.

Highlights

  • Grapheme-colour synaesthesia is a condition in which the visual perception of letters or numbers induces a specific colour sensation

  • The present study focused on grapheme-colour synaesthesia, in which the visual perception of letters or numbers induces a specific colour sensation

  • According to the Illustrated Synaesthetic Experience Questionnaire (ISEQ)[27], synaesthetes were classified into ten associators and 11 projectors, based on the criterion defined by Skelton et al.[27]

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Summary

Introduction

Grapheme-colour synaesthesia is a condition in which the visual perception of letters or numbers induces a specific colour sensation. Such alteration in real brightness perception was observed both in those who experienced synaesthetic colours in external space (projector-type synaesthetes) and in those who experienced such colours ‘in the mind’s eye’ (associator-type synaesthetes) These results support the view that early visual processing is modulated by feedback transmitted from the V4 colour area, the neural activation of which accompanies synaesthetic colour experience. Subsequent studies conducted on a larger number of synaesthetes have demonstrated that a synaesthetic colour elicited by a particular grapheme is constant regardless of a change in the real colour and luminance of a grapheme or its ­background[10,11,12] Based on these findings, the mechanisms underlying synaesthetic colour processing are generally thought to be different from those underlying real colour and brightness ­perception[13].

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