Enhanced semantic priming in synesthetes independent of sensory binding

Date

2015-05

Authors

Goodhew, Stephanie Catherine
Freire, Melissa R.
Edwards, Mark

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Elsevier

Abstract

Synesthesia is the phenomenon in which individuals experience unusual involuntary cross-modal pairings. The evidence to date suggests that synesthetes have access to advantageous item-specific memory cues linked to their synesthetic experience, but whether this emphasis on item-specific memory cues comes at the expense of semantic-level processing has not been unambiguously demonstrated. Here we found that synesthetes produce substantially greater semantic priming magnitudes, unrelated to their specific synesthetic experience. This effect, however, was moderated by whether the synesthetes were projectors (their synesthetic experience occurs in their representation of external space), or associators (their synesthetic experience occurs in their 'mind's eye'). That is, the greater a synesthetes's tendency to project their experience, the weaker their semantic priming when the task did not require them to semantically categorize the stimuli, whereas this trade-off was absent when the task did have that requirement.

Description

Keywords

associator, individual differences, item-specific, projector, relational, semantic priming, synesthesia

Citation

Source

Consciousness and Cognition

Type

Journal article

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

License Rights

Restricted until

Funding information: This research was supported by an Australian Research Council (ARC) Discovery Early Career Research Award (DE140101734) awarded to S.C.G. and an ARC Discovery Project Grant (DP110104553) awarded to M.E.