A study being done at Imperial College London believes that there is a genetic link to this ability. DNA was collected from 196 individuals from 43 families and tested to show the condition for Synesthesia comes from 4 different chromosomes. Brain scans of these people displayed "cross-wiring" between brain regions. "Cross-wiring" was shown in a study led by J.A. Nunn at Goldsmiths College, London, which found that the visual areas of the brain were activated in response to sound in people for whom sound triggers color.
I bet going to a concert or a symphony is an amazing experience for these people, I invision it to be similar to watching the Northern Lights. Check it out...
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- she_be_me23
- added this
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not that i anymore but i had this experience on a sip of LSD 25.
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- seamoore420
- 10 months ago
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I saw a thing about this on TV and my bi-polar room mate tried to claim he also saw colors in sound. I can't stand it when people see something on TV and they think it always applies to them. Everybody is an expert.
*angry sigh*
Anyway its fascinating. Thanks for posting this. -
im also bi polar but i dont hear colors or see sound unless i ingest alot of LSD, and i mean alot at once!
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- seamoore420
- 10 months ago
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I have seen and read about this alot lately. I remember hearing that some individuals can TASTE sounds as well!
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Wow, I didn't even know something like this existed naturally in people. That's really interesting, and I can't even imagine going through life seeing sounds.
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Richard D James, better known as Aphex Twin, has this "affliction". His music really reflects it, imho - he's a maestro. I _wish_ I had this, it would be awesome ^_^
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Synesthesia comes in many flavors. This is just one. I wish I had a visual imagination at all. That would be awesome.
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- Sam_the_Wizer
- 10 months ago
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Pharrell of NERD is another well known person with this condition.
I always wondered what exactly this would look like. Are the colors so strong it affects line of sight? -
that is awesome! i wish i could see sounds!
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- CarlyAlden
- 10 months ago
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That's not an accurate description really..
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Ever since I was a kid, I always thought everyone else had it and never bothered to bring it up. It wasn't until this last year when I started reading up on this that I felt so lucky.
It's not as if you're tripping hardcore when you listen to music though. However, when half asleep (usually only happens in the middle of my night's sleep) and while you're brain isn't processing much other than it's automatic functions, the right music (usually the soft parts of trance, with or without lyrics, but without any bass) can get me higher than any drug out there, and the best part is without any side effects and it could happen at any age. But since you're only half awake, half asleep, it only lasts for so long before you fall asleep again.
But you can organize your music by colors/mixture of colors, which is pretty cool.
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- cerealforeal
- 10 months ago
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This song to this day w/ my synesthesia cracks me up...
It's so intensely visual that it just ALMOST gets overwhelming.
Every reverberated sound creates a symbol of background color while all the small sounds are a series of static/blips/shapes with different colors, forms and depth.
Obviously... taking shrooms or LSD is great... it allows this to all come forward into the open for me and takes A LOT of mental weight off of my mind.
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I hope to everything holy that science doesn't kill this with a pill. This type of mutation (that seems to be growing in frequency) could be an improvement, i.e. a positive evolutionary progression. Because evolution, at its base, is driven by "survival of the most suitable/satisfactory", then we should embrace such a phenomenon and not see it as a 'disorder'. Unfortunately, it's already being pegged into categories such as bi-polar and autism which, alone, these 'disorders' have not been fully explored or understood, but in the meantime, have been deemed dysfunctional, and above all, "not normal".
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I understand as someone in the field of special education how careful one must be when labeling something a disorder but really this term is used when the symptoms affect the individuals capability to learn. I work with children with autism and believe me it is a disorder, not just "not normal". If you read the whole article it goes on to state that many children with synesthesia have reported having trouble learning. And so while you might see "disorder" as a negative label for people struggling to receive a fair and appropriate education that label can save them.
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I agree, and I have read the whole article, which is why I bring up these issues. But also there is a world of difference in "having trouble learning" and "the inability to learn". I may have an inability to learn in a particular schema or framework, but I may be able to learn the same material if presented to me in a way that I personally understand and can effectively apply. Though this process may be costly and time consuming (two attributes the average special needs organization/union has very little of; time and money), ultimately, it does seem to be more fair and appropriate in comparison with generalized teaching/testing techniques.
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- SometimesTheFur
- 10 months ago
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Synesthesia is quite common actually. I have the letter/digit/colour type and so does my friend. I used to be frustrated as a kid when other kids in my class have no idea what I was talking about. Sadly this ability is fading as I grow older. As for learning disability aspect, my friend was diagnosed with a learning ability as a child. She is extremely astute and intelligent, and finished graduate studies but cannot spell to save her life. I don't have a learning disability but (embarrassingly) have difficulties conceptualize left and right. Specifically conceptualizing left and right in the context of problem visualization. (I can turn left and right just fine, take that Zoolander ) There is actually a on going study on people with this type of ability at University of Waterloo. I am however not gifted with the sound and colour, what a rich world these lucky people must live in.
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Check out this Current pod about synaesthesia... good stuff.
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- Justin_Gunn
- 10 months ago
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And then there is this pod about a blind kid who "sees" by using echolocation like a dolphin. Decide for yourself if this is for real...
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- Justin_Gunn
- 10 months ago
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So I'm just really confused... when those of you that claim to be "normal" listen to music do you not see anything? Even within your own mind?
Or what comes to mind? Or do you just feel emotions?
Do you not see patterns? Symbols? Color? I just don't understand how people really get into music at all without this... or is that just it. Is that why boring MTV music culture is so prevalent in today's society, because people can't do this?
I hope my son is this way if this some how makes me unique....
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Wow! reading all this responses got me even more confused! I heard of this a long time ago and i thought i had figured this out. Does anyone know about smelling or tasting sounds? I don't know if this was on the Current pod or smewhere else but heard this also happens.
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I have another form of synesthesia, when I hear a date I see a whole year calendar. Dates and days have images and colors! Wild!
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everybody i know associates certain sounds with certain colors. i definitely think more than 1% have that ability.
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- diabolical44
- 10 months ago
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Synesthesia is not just seeing colors from sounds it is simply the cross-communication of lines of synapses that belong to two different senses. There are MANY forms of synesthesia and not all of them are as superficial as this one. I don't consider it an ability either, but rather a neurological disorder or condition.
There is a theory flying around that "that wiring is already there in everybody, but in a normal brain there is a balance of inhibition and excitation that keeps these areas from talking to each other"
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I'm a registered sound->color broadband synesthete.
Sounds are also tactile sensory for me, and they have form and "physical" substance on the same plane as a car or a tree or that-crowd-of-children-over-there.I'd tell you it was awesome, but I've honestly got nothing to compare it to.
It's both hyper-fuel for the brain/ imagination, and a blatant, constant source of confusion and distraction.I know it's been said somewhere above - but really, who doesn't sense something beyond pure auditory stimuli when listening to music? It speaks directly to the sixth sense. Everyone has synesthesia to a certain degree, and music is one of the easiest ways to sense it, I believe.
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How could it be? Color in sound? I dont understand... It`s a very interesting phenomenon.






