Mondloch Catherine J, Maurer Daphne
McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.
Cogn Affect Behav Neurosci. 2004 Jun;4(2):133-6. doi: 10.3758/cabn.4.2.133.
Adults with auditory-visual synesthesia agree that higher pitched sounds induce smaller, brighter visual percepts. We have hypothesized that these correspondences are remnants of cross-modal neural connections that are present at birth and that influence the development of perception and language even in adults and children without synesthesia. In this study, we explored these correspondences in preschoolers (30-36 months; n = 12 per experiment). The children were asked to indicate which of two bouncing balls was making a centrally located sound. The balls varied in size and/or surface darkness; the sound varied in pitch. The children reliably matched the higher pitched sound to a smaller and lighter (white) ball (Experiment 1), to a lighter (white) ball (Experiment 2), and in one of two groups, to a smaller ball (Experiment 3). Children's matching of pitch and size cannot be attributed to intensity matching or to learning. These data support the hypothesis that some cross-modal correspondences may be remnants of the neural mechanisms underlying neonatal perception.
患有视听联觉的成年人一致认为,音调较高的声音会引发较小、较明亮的视觉感知。我们推测,这些对应关系是出生时就存在的跨模态神经连接的残留,即使在没有联觉的成年人和儿童中,这些连接也会影响感知和语言的发展。在这项研究中,我们探究了学龄前儿童(30 - 36个月;每个实验n = 12)中的这些对应关系。孩子们被要求指出两个弹跳球中哪个正在发出位于中心位置的声音。球的大小和/或表面暗度不同;声音的音高不同。孩子们可靠地将较高音调的声音与较小、较亮(白色)的球匹配(实验1),与较亮(白色)的球匹配(实验2),并且在两组中的一组中,与较小的球匹配(实验3)。儿童对音高和大小的匹配不能归因于强度匹配或学习。这些数据支持了这样一种假设,即一些跨模态对应关系可能是新生儿感知背后神经机制的残留。