Department of Cognitive Science, and ARC Centre of Excellence in Cognition and its Disorders, Macquarie University, Australia.
Cortex. 2013 Jun;49(6):1750-63. doi: 10.1016/j.cortex.2012.04.006. Epub 2012 Apr 27.
Our brain constantly integrates signals across different senses. Auditory-visual synaesthesia is an unusual form of cross-modal integration in which sounds evoke involuntary visual experiences. Previous research primarily focuses on synaesthetic colour, but little is known about non-colour synaesthetic visual features. Here we studied a group of synaesthetes for whom sounds elicit consistent visual experiences of coloured 'geometric objects' located at specific spatial location. Changes in auditory pitch alter the brightness, size, and spatial height of synaesthetic experiences in a systematic manner resembling the cross-modal correspondences of non-synaesthetes, implying synaesthesia may recruit cognitive/neural mechanisms for 'normal' cross-modal processes. To objectively assess the impact of synaesthetic objects on behaviour, we devised a multi-feature cross-modal synaesthetic congruency paradigm and asked participants to perform speeded colour or shape discrimination. We found irrelevant sounds influenced performance, as quantified by congruency effects, demonstrating that synaesthetes were not able to suppress their synaesthetic experiences even when these were irrelevant for the task. Furthermore, we found some evidence for task-specific effects consistent with feature-based attention acting on the constituent features of synaesthetic objects: synaesthetic colours appeared to have a stronger impact on performance than synaesthetic shapes when synaesthetes attended to colour, and vice versa when they attended to shape. We provide the first objective evidence that visual synaesthetic experience can involve multiple features forming object-like percepts and suggest that each feature can be selected by attention despite it being internally generated. These findings suggest theories of the brain mechanisms of synaesthesia need to incorporate a broader neural network underpinning multiple visual features, perceptual knowledge, and feature integration, rather than solely focussing on colour-sensitive areas.
我们的大脑不断整合来自不同感官的信号。听觉-视觉联觉是一种不同寻常的跨模态整合形式,其中声音会引发无意识的视觉体验。以前的研究主要集中在联觉颜色上,但对于非颜色联觉视觉特征知之甚少。在这里,我们研究了一组联觉者,他们的声音会引发一致的视觉体验,即位于特定空间位置的彩色“几何物体”。听觉音高的变化以一种系统的方式改变联觉体验的亮度、大小和空间高度,类似于非联觉者的跨模态对应关系,这表明联觉可能会招募认知/神经机制来进行“正常”的跨模态过程。为了客观评估联觉对象对行为的影响,我们设计了一个多特征跨模态联觉一致性范式,并要求参与者进行快速颜色或形状辨别。我们发现无关声音会影响表现,这可以通过一致性效应来量化,这表明联觉者即使这些声音与任务无关,也无法抑制他们的联觉体验。此外,我们发现了一些与特征相关的注意力作用于联觉对象的组成特征的任务特异性效应的证据:当联觉者关注颜色时,联觉颜色似乎比联觉形状对表现有更强的影响,反之亦然,当他们关注形状时。我们提供了第一个客观证据,表明视觉联觉体验可以涉及形成物体般知觉的多个特征,并表明尽管它们是内部产生的,但每个特征都可以通过注意力来选择。这些发现表明,联觉大脑机制的理论需要纳入一个更广泛的神经网络,以支持多个视觉特征、感知知识和特征整合,而不仅仅是专注于对颜色敏感的区域。