a Department of Psychology , University of Milano-Bicocca , Milan , Italy.
Cogn Neurosci. 2011 Mar;2(1):34-46. doi: 10.1080/17588928.2010.516820. Epub 2010 Oct 27.
We investigated whether there are reliable crossmodal associations between foods/flavours and words in neurologically normal individuals. Participants were given a range of foods to taste, and had to rate each one along a number of dimensions. These included scales anchored with the words "takete/maluma" and "bouba/kiki". The results highlight the existence of robust crossmodal associations between complex foods/flavours and words in normal (i.e., nonsynesthetic) individuals. For example, crisps (potato chips) and cranberry sauce are rated as being more "takete" than brie cheese, while mint chocolate is rated as more "kiki" than regular chocolate. On the basis of these results, we suggest that our brains can extract supramodal/conceptual properties from foods/flavours (just as has been demonstrated previously using auditory and visual stimuli) and meaningfully match them crossmodally. The possibility that this process is based on the global Gestalt of a food rather than on any specific sensory qualities is also discussed.
我们研究了在神经正常的个体中,食物/味道和词语之间是否存在可靠的跨模态关联。参与者品尝了一系列食物,并根据多个维度对每种食物进行评分。这些维度的标度锚定在“takete/maluma”和“bouba/kiki”这两个词上。研究结果突出了正常(即非联觉)个体中复杂食物/味道和词语之间存在强大的跨模态关联。例如,薯片和蔓越莓酱比布里干酪更被评为“takete”,而薄荷巧克力比普通巧克力更被评为“kiki”。基于这些结果,我们认为我们的大脑可以从食物/味道中提取超模态/概念属性(就像以前使用听觉和视觉刺激所证明的那样),并跨模态地对其进行有意义的匹配。还讨论了这个过程是否基于食物的整体格式塔而不是任何特定的感官质量的可能性。