synaesthesia

listen to the pronunciation of synaesthesia
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A physiological or psychological phenomenon whereby a particular sensory stimulus triggers a second kind of sensation. For example, reading the letter 'r' may trigger the visual sensation of the colour purple in the mind or the eye of the synaesthete (grapheme → colour synaesthesia); or, more rarely, for example, the phoneme /l/ may elicit the taste of mince (lexical → gustatory synaesthesia)

Into her darkness, a churning synaesthesia, where her pain was the taste of old iron, scent of melon, wings of a moth brushing her cheek.

A literary device whereby one kind of sensation is described in the terms of another

Then these melodies turn to ice as real night music takes over, pianos and vibes erecting clusters in the high brittle octaves and a clarinet wandering across like a crack on a pond. Saxes doing the same figure eight over and over again.

One feeling or perception described with words usually used for a totally different or opposite feeling or perception Ex: "The sky smelled blue " "The soft hum of fog "
a brain disorder characterized by a cross-referencing of senses: for example, sounds might be "seen" and colors might be "heard "
{i} process in which one type of sensation produces a secondary subjective sensation (as when one sees a particular color in response to certain music)
A physiological or psychological phenomenon whereby a particular sensory stimulus triggers a second kind of sensation. For example, reading the letter r may trigger the visual sensation of the colour purple in the mind or the eye of the synaesthete (grapheme → colour synaesthesia); or, more rarely, for example, the phoneme /l/ may elicit the taste of mince (lexical → gustatory synaesthesia)
stimulus in one sensory field leads to a hallucination in another sensory field
a sensation that normally occurs in one sense modality occurs when another modality is stimulated
synesthesia
A condition in which a stimulation of one sense causes sensation of another sense
Synesthesia
A neurological condition in which stimulation of one sensory or cognitive pathway leads to automatic, involuntary experiences in a second sensory or cognitive pathway
synesthesia
alternative spelling of synaesthesia
synesthesia
{i} process in which one type of sensation produces a secondary subjective sensation (as when one sees a particular color in response to certain music)
synesthesia
Condition in which information from one sensory modality (e g , auditory) is coded in another modality (e g , visual) (Solso)
synesthesia
A very close and quick overlap between a sequence of two or more representational systems, such as "see / feel" (feelings overlap with what is seen) or "hear / feel" (feelings overlap with what is heard)
synesthesia
The psychological effect in which people experience a crossover in sensory perception such as hearing colors and seeing notes
synesthesia
Automatic link from one sense to another Illustrated in apparently illogical 'sensory predicates' in expressions as 'I'll see how I feel about it'
synesthesia
a sensation that normally occurs in one sense modality occurs when another modality is stimulated
synaesthesia

    Расстановка переносов

    syn·aes·the·sia

    Произношение

    Этимология

    () From Ancient Greek σύν (sun) "with" + αἴσθησις (aisthēsis) "sensation", modeled after anaesthesia.
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