[PDF] from brunel.ac.ukN Sagiv, A Ilbeigi… - Intellectica, 2011 - people.brunel.ac.uk We constantly receive signals from different sensory modalities and must combine those in order to understand objects and events around us (Macaluso & Driver, 2005). Hence, there is little wonder that substantial cross-modal interactions take place in the human brain. What is ... Related articles - View as HTML - All 3 versions
AI Goller, K Richards, S Novak… - Cortex, 2011 - Elsevier In mirror-touch synaesthesia merely observing another person being touched will cause the observer to experience a touch sensation on their own body. The current study investigates whether this, normally a developmental condition, might be acquired following amputation. Twenty- ...
L Diesendruck, L Gertner, L Botzer, L Goldfarb… - 2011 - Taylor & Francis Month–space synaesthetes experience months as sequences arranged in spatially defined configurations. While most works on synaesthesia have studied its perceptual implications, this study focuses on the synaesthetic influence on a synaesthete's action behaviour. SM, a ...
A Rogowska - Review of General Psychology, 2011 - psycnet.apa.org Armel, KC, & Ramachandran, VS (1999). Acquired synesthesia in retinitis pigmentosa. Neurocase, 5, 293-296. ... Bahrick, LE (2001). Increasing specificity in perceptual development: Infants' detection of nested levels of multimodal stimulation. Journal of ...
F Brown - 2011 - espace.library.uq.edu.au Synaesthesia is a condition wherein ordinary stimuli elicit extraordinary experiences. For colourgrapheme synaesthetes, reading black numbers, letters or words can elicit coloured experiences. The current study examined unresolved issues concerning how these coloured experiences are ... Cached
[PDF] from brunel.ac.ukN Sagiv, A Ilbeigi… - Intellectica, 2011 - people.brunel.ac.uk We constantly receive signals from different sensory modalities and must combine those in order to understand objects and events around us (Macaluso & Driver, 2005). Hence, there is little wonder that substantial cross-modal interactions take place in the human brain. What is ... Related articles - View as HTML - All 3 versions
AI Goller, K Richards, S Novak… - Cortex, 2011 - Elsevier In mirror-touch synaesthesia merely observing another person being touched will cause the observer to experience a touch sensation on their own body. The current study investigates whether this, normally a developmental condition, might be acquired following amputation. Twenty- ...
L Diesendruck, L Gertner, L Botzer, L Goldfarb… - 2011 - Taylor & Francis Month–space synaesthetes experience months as sequences arranged in spatially defined configurations. While most works on synaesthesia have studied its perceptual implications, this study focuses on the synaesthetic influence on a synaesthete's action behaviour. SM, a ...
A Rogowska - Review of General Psychology, 2011 - psycnet.apa.org Armel, KC, & Ramachandran, VS (1999). Acquired synesthesia in retinitis pigmentosa. Neurocase, 5, 293-296. ... Bahrick, LE (2001). Increasing specificity in perceptual development: Infants' detection of nested levels of multimodal stimulation. Journal of ...
F Brown - 2011 - espace.library.uq.edu.au Synaesthesia is a condition wherein ordinary stimuli elicit extraordinary experiences. For colourgrapheme synaesthetes, reading black numbers, letters or words can elicit coloured experiences. The current study examined unresolved issues concerning how these coloured experiences are ... Cached