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2009 | 45 | 4 | 595-612

Article title

On Hearing Colours - Cross-Modal Associations in Vowel Perception in a Non-Synaesthetic Population

Selected contents from this journal

Title variants

Languages of publication

EN

Abstracts

EN
The present study is a continuation of previous investigations into the nature of sound-colour associations in a non-synaesthetic population conducted on English and Polish vowel sound systems and it aims at providing further evidence for the non-arbitrary nature of cross-modal mappings. The experiment1 was run on a specially designed computer program and involved 90 participants who were asked to match randomised auditory stimuli (12 English vowel sounds recorded in 2 conditions: in isolation and in a CVC context) with one of 11 basic colours (red, yellow, green, blue, brown, purple, pink, orange, black, white and grey) presented as coloured rectangles on a computer screen. The program kept record of the colour choice and reaction time of the participants, who fell into 2 groups with respect to the level of their language proficiency and phonetic awareness.An analysis of the results revealed statistically significant interactions between specific colours and individual vowel sounds for all 12 English vowels examined in the combined analysis; for 10 vowels in Condition 1 (isolated auditory stimuli) and for 7 vowels in Condition 2 (stimuli in the CVC context). A group effect was not found to be significant as far as the quality of mappings was concerned; however, in the case of reaction times the less advanced learners took significantly longer to assign colours to sounds in context. The findings indicate that vowel-sound mappings in non-synaesthetic perception appear non-arbitrary and follow the general tendencies in which bright colours (yellow, green) are associated with high front vowel sounds, whereas dark colours (brown, blue, black) are attributed to back vowels, while open sounds tend to be perceived as red and central vowels are mapped onto achromatic grey.

Publisher

Year

Volume

45

Issue

4

Pages

595-612

Physical description

Dates

published
2009-12-01
online
2010-01-13

Contributors

  • Adam Mickiewicz University, Poznań

References

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  • Marks, L. 1975. "On coloured-hearing synaesthesia: Cross-modal translations of sensory dimensions". Psychological Bulletin 82(3). 303-331.
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  • Miyahara, T., T. Amemiya and R. Sekiguchi. 2006. "A psychological experiment on nonsynesthetes correspondence between colours and voiced vowels". Proceedings of the First International Workshop in Kansei, Japan. 102-105.
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  • Slawson, W. 1985. Sound colour. University of California Press.
  • Ward, J., B. Huckstep and E. Tsakanikos. 2006. "Sound-colour synaesthesia: To what extent does it use cross-modal mechanisms common to us all?" Cortex 42. 264-280.[PubMed][Crossref]
  • Watkins, S., L. Shams, S. Tanaka, J. Haynes and G. Rees. 2006. "Sound alters activity in human V1 in association with illusory visual perception". NeuroImage 31. 1247-1256.[Crossref]
  • Wrembel, M. 2007. "Still sounds like a rainbow - A proposal for a coloured vowel chart". Proceedings of the Phonetics Teaching and Learning Conference (PTLC2007), London. 1-4.
  • Wrembel, M. and K. Rataj. 2008. "Sounds like a rainbow - Sound-colour mappings in vowel perception". Proceedings of the 2nd ISCA Workshop on Experimental Linguistics (ExLing 2008), Athens. 237-240.

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.doi-10_2478_v10010-009-0028-0
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