What synesthesia really is?

Think Different Nation
3 min readMay 20, 2021

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Even numbers seem gentle and pleasant to me while odd numbers are harsh and annoying for me; similarly, I associate each numerical digit with a different color and for me each color has unique personality trait like number 4 triggers blue color in my mind and I perceive blue color as something being sophisticated and trendy. This is what that I have been experiencing since my childhood but because of my perception about it as being something aberrant and abnormal kept me to discuss it with anyone else until I knew about a concept known as synesthesia. After which I realized that I am also one of the 2–4% of the total population having synesthetic personality.

Synesthesia is actually a perceptual experience in which one stimuli triggers multiple senses simultaneously, automatically and involuntarily. It can happen among any combination of senses and cognitive pathways. People having synesthesia are called synesthetes and they may hear colors, taste words, see different sounds, visualize abstract concepts, or hear silent videos. Synesthesia takes many forms, at least its 60 forms have been highlighted so far (i.e. on the basis of different combinations among senses) and the point of interest is anyone may experience its multiple forms like a girl told me that numbers and letters trigger a color experience in her mind and at the same time she associates each number with a different kind of music.

So, what are the neuroscientific basis behind this phenomenon?

Our brain automatically and involuntarily develops certain roots and pathways or connections and discards those routes or connections that are seldom used. For instance, if you are shown the picture of a famous personality, you will immediately tell his name but how? Just because our brain has the ability to make automatic and involuntary connections, this is why my brain always makes a connection between number 4 and color blue.

Results of Positron Emission Tomography (PET) and Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) of the brains of different synesthetes under observation have revealed increased activation in more than one areas of the brain in response to a particular type of stimuli. For instance, synesthetes who claim to see colors in different sounds had activation in both visual and auditory areas of the brain when their brain received sound stimuli. Researchers name it as ‘cross-activation’

Scientists are interested to know more and more about it since more than 200 years, recently some scientists and psychologist work on it proposed that synesthesia is actually the result of an excess of neural connection between associated senses

To appropriately understand this condition and its relation to normal cognition requires technical and intellectually diverse contributions from different areas of biology

Is there any role of Heredity in Synesthesia?

As Synesthesia may take many different forms so it’s difficult to say that whether it passes from parents to offspring. It is possible that parents have different form of synesthesia and the offspring holds a different form of synesthesia and the frequency also varies i.e. parents may hold one or two types of synesthesia and children hold more than two or three types of synesthesia or vice versa or it may also happen that parent and children hold completely different forms of synesthesia. Still evidence exists proving the remarkable role of heredity in synesthesia. Extensive research is required however, to prove the link between heredity and synesthesia.

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https://thinkdifferentnation.com/2020/11/what-synesthesia-really-is/

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