Abstract

Adults readily make associations between stimuli perceived consecutively through different sense modalities, such as shapes and sounds. Researchers have only recently begun to investigate such correspondences in infants but only a handful of studies have focused on infants less than a year old. Are infants able to make cross-sensory correspondences from birth? Do certain correspondences require extensive real-world experience? Some studies have shown that newborns are able to match stimuli perceived in different sense modalities. Yet, the origins and mechanisms underlying these abilities are unclear. The present paper explores these questions and reviews some hypotheses on the emergence and early development of cross-sensory associations and their possible links with language development. Indeed, if infants can perceive cross-sensory correspondences between events that share certain features but are not strictly contingent or co-located, one may posit that they are using a “sixth sense” in Aristotle’s sense of the term. And a likely candidate for explaining this mechanism, as Aristotle suggested, is movement.

Highlights

  • INTRODUCTIONBased on a large body of experimental research on the role of these amodal characteristics in early perceptual abilities, Bahrick and Lickliter (2000) put forward the “intersensory redundancy hypothesis” to explain how infants perceive coherent, unified multimodal objects and events through different sense modalities

  • Aristotle posited the sensus communis as a sixth sense; one that does not depend on specific sensory apparatus, but that is rooted in the possibility or potentiality of movement

  • Great advances have been made in the fields of neuroscience, psychology and robotics in answer to Aristotle’s conundrum, the question of the origins and development of cross-sensory perception in infancy is still only partially answered

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Based on a large body of experimental research on the role of these amodal characteristics in early perceptual abilities, Bahrick and Lickliter (2000) put forward the “intersensory redundancy hypothesis” to explain how infants perceive coherent, unified multimodal objects and events through different sense modalities This theory proposes that, in order to be perceptually integrated, the same information must be spatially coordinated and temporally synchronous across two or more sensory modalities and that cross-sensory integration is only possible for amodal properties that are not specific to a single sense modality (e.g., shape, rhythm, duration, and intensity). 4-month-old infants can perceive affect (joy, sadness, or anger) in speech sequences that are supported by audiovisual presentations of faces (Walker-Andrews and Lennon, 1991; Flom and Bahrick, 2007) Overall, these studies support the idea of a precocious crosssensory perception capacity, based on both cross-modal transfer and cross-sensory integration. Why do such associations exist? we will focus on sound symbolism as a specific form of cross-sensory association that could be an important starting point for the development of language

THE PARTICULAR CASE OF SOUND SYMBOLISM
CONCLUSION AND PERSPECTIVES
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