Synaesthesia research

2005

Synaesthesia publications from 2005:

Amedi, A., Bermpohl, F., Camprodon, J., Fox, S., Merabet, L., Meijer, P., et al. (2005). Neural correlates of visual-to-auditory sensory substitution in proficient blind users. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience (CNS abstract).

Azoulai, S., Hubbard, E., & Ramachandran, V. S. (2005). Does synesthesia contribute to mathematical savant skills? Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, Supplement, 69.

Beeli, G., Esslen, M., & Jancke, L. (2005). When coloured sounds taste sweet. Nature, 434, 38.

Blake, R., Palmeri, T. J., Marois, R., & Kim, C.-Y. (2005). On the perceptual reality of synesthetic color. In L. C. Robertson & N. Sagiv (Eds.), Synesthesia: Perspectives from cognitive neuroscience. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Blakemore, S.-J., Bristow, D., Bird, G., Frith, C., & Ward, J. (2005). Somatosensory activations during the observation of touch and a case of vision-touch synesthesia. Brain, 128, 1571-1583.

Cohen Kadosh, R., Sagiv, N., Linden, D. E. J., Robertson, L. C., Elinger, G., & Henik, A. (2005). When blue is larger than red: colors influence numerical cognition in synesthesia. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 17, 1766-1773.

Day, S. (2005). Some demographic and socio-cultural aspects of synesthesia. In L. C. Robertson & N. Sagiv (Eds.), Synesthesia: Perspectives from cognitive neuroscience. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Dixon, M. J., & Smilek, D. (2005). The importance of individual differences in grapheme-color synesthesia. Neuron, 45, 821-823.

Hubbard, E. M., Arman, A. C., Ramachandran, V. S., & Boynton, G. M. (2005). Individual differences among grapheme-colour synaesthetes: Brain-behavior correlations. Neuron, 45, 975-985.

Hubbard, E. M., Piazza, M., Pinel, P., & Dehaene, S. (2005). Interactions between numbers and space in parietal cortex. Nature Reviews Neuroscience, 6, 435-448.

Hubbard, E. M., & Ramachandran, V. S. (2005). Neurocognitive mechanisms of synesthesia. Neuron, 48, 509-520.

Kim, C. Y., & Blake, R. (2005). Watercolor illusion induced by synesthetic colors. Perception, 34, 1501-1507.

Knoch, D., Gianotti, L. R., Mohr, C., & Brugger, P. (2005). Synesthesia: When colors count. Cognitive Brain Research, 25, 372-374.

Merabet, L. B., Rizzo, J. F., Amedi, A., Somers, D. C., & Pascual-Leone, A. (2005). What blindness can tell us about seeing again: Merging neuroplasticity and neuroprostheses. Nature Reviews Neuroscience, 6, 71-77.

Mulvenna, C., & Walsh, V. (2005). Synaesthesia. Current Biology, 15, R399-400.

Osterbauer, R. A., Matthews, P. M., Jenkinson, M., Beckmann, C. F., Hansen, P. C., & Calvert, G. A. (2005). Color of scents: Chromatic stimuli modulate odor responses in the human brain. Journal of Neurophysiology, 93, 3434-3441.

Rich, A. N., Bradshaw, J. L., & Mattingley, J. B. (2005). A systematic, large-scale study of synaesthesia: Implications for the role of early experience in lexical-colour associations. Cognition, 98, 53-84.

Simner, J., Lanz, M., Jansari, A., Noonan, K., Glover, L., Oakley, D. A., et al. (2005). Non-random associations of graphemes to colours in synaesthetic and normal populations. Cognitive Neuropsychology, 22, 1069-1085.

Smilek, D., Dixon, M. J., & Merikle, P. M. (2005a). Binding of graphemes and synesthetic colors in color-graphemic synesthesia. In L. C. Robertson & N. Sagiv (Eds.), Synesthesia: Perspectives from cognitive neuroscience. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Smilek, D., Dixon, M. J., & Merikle, P. M. (2005b). Synaesthesia: Discordant male monozygotic twins. NeuroCase, 11, 363-370.

Taylor, K. I., Brugger, P., & Schwarz, U. (2005). Audiovisual peduncular hallucinations: A release of cross-modal integration sites? Cognitive and Behavioral Neurology, 18, 135-136.

Ward, J., & Simner, J. (2005). Is synaesthesia an X-linked dominant trait with lethality in males? Perception, 34, 611-623.

Ward, J., Simner, J., & Auyeung, V. (2005). A comparison of lexical-gustatory and grapheme-colour synaesthesia. Cognitive Neuropsychology, 22, 28-41.

Weiss, P. H., Zilles, K., & Fink, G. R. (2005). When visual perception causes feeling: Enhanced cross-modal processing in grapheme-color synesthesia. NeuroImage, 28, 859-868.

Westbury, C. (2005). Implicit sound symbolism in lexical access: Evidence from an interference task. Brain and Language, 93, 10-19.