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Sensory Blending

Sensory Blending

On Synaesthesia and related phenomena

9780199688289
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Description
Synaesthesia is, in the words of the cognitive neuroscientist Cytowic, a strange sensory blending. Synaesthetes report seeing colours when hearing sounds or proper names, or they experience tastes when reading the names of subway stations. How do these rare cases relate to other more common examples where sensory experiences get mixed - cases like mirror-touch, personification, cross-modal mappings, and drug experiences? Are we all more or less synaesthetes, and does this mean thatwe are all subjects of crossmodal illusions? Could some apparently strange sensory cases give us an insight into how perception works? Recent research on the causes and prevalence of synaesthesia raises new questions regarding the links between these cases, and the unity of the condition. By bringing together contributions from leading cognitive neuroscientists and philosophers, this volume considers for the first time the broader theoretical lessons arising from such cases of sensory blending, with regard to the nature of perception and consciousness, the boundaries between perception, illusion and imagination, and the communicability and sharing of experiences.
Product Details
OUP Oxford
87800
9780199688289
9780199688289

Data sheet

Publication date
2017
Issue number
1
Cover
hard cover
Pages count
332
Dimensions (mm)
156 x 234
Weight (g)
644
  • Introduction; Part 1. Defining and measuring synaesthesia; Synaesthesia, then and now; Synesthesia vs. crossmodal illusions; Synesthetic perception as continuous with ordinary perception, or: Were all synesthetes now; Reporting color experience in grapheme-color synesthesia: on the relation between color appearance, categories, and terms; Part 2. Challenges raised by synaesthesia; Synesthesia and consciousness: exploring the connections; Synesthetic binding and the reactivation model of memory; Merleau-Ponty and the problem of synaesthesia; When is Synaesthesia Perception?; Can synaesthesia present the world as it really is?; Part 3. Boundaries of synaesthesia: Unconscious, acquired and social varieties of sensory unions; Questioning the continuity claim: what difference does consciousness make?; The induction of synaesthesia in non-synaesthetes; Patrolling the boundaries of synaesthesia: a critical appraisal of transient and artificially-induced forms of synaesthetic experiences; Mirror touch synaesthesia: intersubjective or intermodal fusion?; Personification, synaesthesia and social cognition;
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