![]() Enhanced memory ability: Insights from synaesthesia. Modern Psychological Studies,21(1), 84–93. Synesthesia and Memory: An Exploratory Analysis. Journal of Experimental Psychology Learning Memory and Cognition, 37(1), 219-229. Synesthesia and Memory: Color Congruency, von Restorff, and False Memory Effects. Representational Account of Memory: Insights from Aging and Synesthesia. ![]() Pfeifer, G., Ward, J., Chan, D., & Sigala, N. Associative memory advantage in grapheme-color synesthetes compared to older, but not young adults. Is synaesthesia one condition or many? A large‐scale analysis reveals subgroups. Turning univalent stimuli bivalent: Synesthesia can cause cognitive conflict in task switching. Grapheme-color synaesthesia is associated with a distinct cognitive style. The Mind of a Mnemonist: A Little Book About a Vast Memory. ![]() New insights into mechanisms of enhanced synaesthetic memory: Benefits are synaesthesia-type-specific. Exceptional Abilities in the Spatial Representation of Numbers and Time: Insights from Synesthesia. Globally Altered Structural Brain Topology in Grapheme-Color Synesthesia. Better together? The cognitive advantages of synaesthesia for time, numbers, and space. Superior encoding enhances recall in color-graphemic synesthesia. Synaesthesia and number cognition in children. Journal of Neuroscience Methods 159(1), 139-145. A standardized test battery for the study of synesthesia. ![]() Are synesthetes exceptional beyond their synesthetic associations? A systematic comparison of creativity, personality, cognition, and mental imagery in synesthetes and controls. Enhanced mental rotation ability in time-space synesthesia. Explicit associative learning and memory in synesthetes and non synesthetes. Personality traits in people with synaesthesia: Do synaesthetes have an atypical personality profile? Personality and Individual Differences, 54(7), 828-831. The results of this study show that teenagers with synesthesia have a memory advantage in matrix recall memory, leading to the conclusion that, for some types of memory, synesthesia begins to provide a benefit in the years of adolescence.īanissy, M. This study conducts an experimental analysis on the relationship between synesthesia and advantageous memory in teenagers for immediate, delayed, and matrix recall memory. However, a group study of this nature has never been conducted on teenagers with synesthesia, despite this being the age range where advantageous memory would seem likely to manifest. Children with synesthesia in group studies have not been shown to have advantageous memory, while adults with synesthesia in group studies have shown the opposite. Very little is known about what causes this phenomenon, although due to a recent influx of research, it has been recorded that synesthesia provides a wide array of cognitive benefits to those who experience it, with the most notable being memory. Synesthesia is a rare phenomenon in which people associate an inducer, such as a sound, song, or sequence of time, with a specific concurrent, such as a color, shape, or physical sensation.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |