tagged w/ Human Perception
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How does violin music smell? What does the reflection of trees in a lake sound like? What color is Thursday? To most people, these questions might seem completely nonsensical, but to people with synesthesia they sound perfectly reasonable. Synesthesia is a perceptual condition in which there is an involuntary blending of one or more of the senses. The most common form is chromagraphemia, the associating of colors with numbers and letters -- but the sense--mingling can get a lot weirder. A synesthete might see moving blobs of color when tasting foods, or taste specific flavors upon hearing certain words.
Once dismissed as a product of an overly active imagination, artistic fancy, drug use or even just craziness, synesthesia is finally being recognized as having a biological basis. PhD candidate Bryan Alvarez will show us his research on this condition and also share his life as a person living with this condition.How does violin music smell? What does the reflection of trees in a lake sound like?... more
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Elizabeth Bromstein
Rock and roll ain’t noise pollution – at least not according to AC/DC.
I beg to differ. I think anything that’s too loud is aurally contaminating. I don’t care how good the groove is; whatever it is can be listened to at a reasonable volume. You kids get the hell off my lawn.
Read the whole story here!
http://www.nowtoronto.com/lifestyle/althealth.cfm?content=162461
While you are there, listen to Adria's Ecocast!
Hear Adria talk about her latest Ecoholic column in her weekly Ecocast!
It is on the bottom of the page. Very good!
Elizabeth Bromstein
Rock and roll ain’t noise pollution – at least not... more
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