Shin Eun-hye, Kim Chai-Youn
Department of Psychology, Korea University, Seongbuk-Gu, Anam-ro 145, Seoul 136701, Republic of Korea.
Department of Psychology, Korea University, Seongbuk-Gu, Anam-ro 145, Seoul 136701, Republic of Korea.
Neuropsychologia. 2014 Dec;65:25-36. doi: 10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2014.09.032. Epub 2014 Oct 14.
Individuals with grapheme-color synesthesia experience "colors" when viewing achromatic letters and digits. Despite the large individual difference in synesthetic association between inducing graphemes and induced colors, the search for the determinants of synesthetic experience has begun. So far, however, research has drawn an inconsistent picture; some studies have shown that graphemes of similar visual shape tend to induce similar synesthetic colors, while others suggested sound as an important factor. Moreover, meaning seems to affect synesthetic color. In the present work, we sought to investigate the determinants of synesthetic color by testing four multilingual grapheme-color synesthetes who experience "colors" upon viewing Korean (hangul), Japanese (katakana and hiragana), and English (Latin alphabet) characters on a standardized color-matching procedure. Results showed that pairs of characters of matched sound tended to induce similar synesthetic colors. This was the case not only between two scripts within the same language (Japanese hiragana and katakana) but also between two different languages (Japanese and Korean). In addition, pairs of characters with similar initial phonemes tended to induce similar colors; this was general across multiple languages. Results also showed that pairs of sequential words in Korean, Japanese, English, and Chinese that have the same meaning tended to elicit similar synesthetic colors. When those pairs of words shared not only meaning but also sound, the similarity of the induced synesthetic colors was even greater. Our work is one of the few initial attempts to examine the influence of visual shape, sound, meaning, and their interaction on synesthetic color induced by characters across multiple languages.
患有 grapheme - 颜色联觉的个体在看到无色彩的字母和数字时会体验到“颜色”。尽管诱发字形与诱发颜色之间的联觉关联存在很大的个体差异,但对联觉体验决定因素的探索已经开始。然而,到目前为止,研究得出的情况并不一致;一些研究表明,视觉形状相似的字形往往会诱发相似的联觉颜色,而另一些研究则认为声音是一个重要因素。此外,意义似乎也会影响联觉颜色。在本研究中,我们通过对四名多语言 grapheme - 颜色联觉者进行测试,在标准化的颜色匹配程序中观察他们在看到韩语(韩文)、日语(片假名和平假名)及英语(拉丁字母)字符时体验到的“颜色”,来探究联觉颜色的决定因素。结果表明,发音匹配的字符对往往会诱发相似的联觉颜色。不仅同一语言中的两种文字(日语平假名和片假名)之间是这样,两种不同语言(日语和韩语)之间也是如此。此外,初始音素相似的字符对往往会诱发相似的颜色;这在多种语言中都是普遍现象。结果还表明,韩语、日语、英语和中文中意义相同的连续单词对往往会引发相似的联觉颜色。当这些单词对不仅意义相同而且发音也相同时,诱发的联觉颜色的相似性甚至更高。我们的研究是为数不多的初步尝试之一,旨在考察视觉形状、声音、意义及其相互作用对多种语言字符诱发的联觉颜色的影响。